Pointless - and slightly tipsy - happy post

Pippity

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Blue's been out of work for six months or so, due to one niggling lameness issue after another (either hers or mine!) and then lockdown happening. I'm not at all happy with her saddle fit at the moment, so last week I strapped on my big girl pants and my squishy sheepskin bareback pad and hopped on board.

I was shaking with fear at various points, because the last time I rode her beyond a few minutes in the school, she bucked me off and I was expecting her to throw in some airs above the ground that I had no chance of sitting without stirrups! However, she was good as gold, despite being grumpy that she hasn't actually retired.

I've now had two lessons in my bareback pad, and we're really making progress. I'm back to being able to halt her with just my seat, and we actually had a few minutes of her working nicely on the bit tonight!

She'd been a monkey to dismount the last few times I rode her despite her saddle fitter assuring me her saddle was fine. However, her behaviour with the bareback pad has made it very clear that, no, her saddle wasn't fine. The first few times I leaned forward, without even making any other move to dismount, she tensed and readied herself to jump to the side. But she soon picked up that it doesn't hurt any more, and tonight she was back to her old self and standing rock-steady for both mounting and dismounting.

She's getting shoes back on next week, and then I'm going to pop some stirrups on her bareback pad (I know, I know, but I'm a coward) and start doing some little ten-minute walk hacks.

I was genuinely starting to think I'd never have the courage to get back on board, despite the fact she's a bloody walking armchair, so I'm thrilled with both of us! And in future, I'll listen to her when she's telling me her saddle doesn't fit, no matter what the saddle fitter says.
 
I think this is where bareback pads are really useful; even in walk you can tell a comfortable horse from an uncomfortable one
My horse also disagreed with the saddle fitter - she said the saddle fitted and I believed her until I rode him in his pad and the difference was amazing
Good luck with the hacking and getting a saddle sorted
 
I too have a bareback pad for this very reason. Great that now you have a baseline to compare other saddles to.

Jay Man insisted on a Barrie Swain Semiflex. It was like 6 months of schooling was done in 30 minutes. Previously, as in before I bought him, he was regarded as very dangerous (rearing etc) but I think the saddle was a lot of that even though he had saddles that did appear to fit.

With a previous horse, he went a lot better in an Ansur (Old type Solution) although the new Solution made him sore.

Saddle issues are the pits! But YAY for happy days and finding answers.
 
That's really good to hear! I think I might try a pad on the micro cob because I'm pretty sure her saddle isn't quite right
 
That's really good to hear! I think I might try a pad on the micro cob because I'm pretty sure her saddle isn't quite right

I have one of the Christ Lammfelle ones with foam knee rolls and cantle.

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Blue hates being ridden totally bareback, so this is a good compromise for both of us. The knee rolls and cantle help me stay secure, and the sheepskin gives her plenty of padding between my bum and her back, while still letting me feel how her back is working.
 
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