That's an interesting design.
I intensely dislike conventional spurs with pointy bits, but those look just like a heel extension for the rider's foot.
Are they competition legal?
According to their blurb they were designed for horses that dislike conventional spurs or for introducing a horse to spurs. They are supposed to rub less I think as well.
I like the idea of a heel extension rather than a pointy bit to poke into them. Was thinking of trying them for my lazy horse as a back up to my leg but they are roughly £70 so was wondering are they worth it before buying.
No idea about competition legal sorry!
According to their blurb they were designed for horses that dislike conventional spurs or for introducing a horse to spurs. They are supposed to rub less I think as well.
I like the idea of a heel extension rather than a pointy bit to poke into them. Was thinking of trying them for my lazy horse as a back up to my leg but they are roughly £70 so was wondering are they worth it before buying.
No idea about competition legal sorry!
How much !!, I think they look ridiculous and ugly. £16 buys you plastic roller ball spurs. I have a completely different view on lazy horses, assuming there are no health reasons for reluctance to be in front of the leg of course. I use (or did, I don't have a lazy horse at present) a pair of swan necks with a rowel on to teach the horse that leg on means go forward. Obviously you need an independent leg/hand/seat and you must allow the horse forwards. There is nothing worse than riding a horse that you have to keep asking to stay forwards and even in its paces. They are horrible to ride and equally horrible watching someone kick and nudge for every stride. The horse should be doing the work not the rider.
I repeat; unless you have control of your leg and understand the purpose and use of Spurs, then you are not ready to wear spurs.They are very expensive I agree. I couldn't care less about ugliness or the look of them if they did what I wanted though. Agree with what you said about getting them forward, he is exhausting to ride. He's just an extremely laid back horse in general, have-a-beer-and-a-chat temperament, (ex-racer too!) but sensitive skin.
I've tried the plastic roller ball and cheap plastic Shires ones but he wasn't keen, and it's always in the back of my mind I could accidentally jab him through my own fault.
Just wondering if they have genuinely made a difference to anyone's horse.
If you are riding properly then you shouldn’t be poking pointy bits into your horse: if you’re doing so then you’re not ready to be wearing Spurs.
There are plenty of people who are capable of riding without marking their horses, the fact that some people are not kinda proves my point. I suggest that you take some lessons from a reputable instructor to help you learn how to ride your horse more effectively before investing in equipment that you neither understand nor are yet capable of utilising correctly.Obviously I'm not intending on poking pointy bits into my horse, but no one has a completely perfect leg that never moves. Spurs wouldn't work unless they made contact with the horse. Otherwise horses would never be pulled in at FEI for spur marks.
I don't ride with conventional spurs, or really want to. I just wondered if these would be a help with a larger surface area than conventional spurs. As a short term thing rather than forever
There are plenty of people who are capable of riding without marking their horses, the fact that some people are not kinda proves my point. I suggest that you take some lessons from a reputable instructor to help you learn how to ride your horse more effectively before investing in equipment that you neither understand nor are yet capable of utilising correctly.
Did you have a 5-stage vetting before buying this horse? Have you consulted a vet about this problem? I think that there's usually a good reason why horses don't cooperate if they have received a reasonably positive early education.
Your horse sounds like a lovely chap. I do hope that you find a mutually comfortable way forward together.