Saddle fit opinions

I am not sure the saddle was completely perpendicular to the camera when you took the photo. If you look at the saddle rack above where it is attached to the wall it does not look horizontal or straight.
 
I am not sure the saddle was completely perpendicular to the camera when you took the photo. If you look at the saddle rack above where it is attached to the wall it does not look horizontal or straight.
In all fairness it may well not be! There’s not a lot straight about this place and the walls in the tack room tended to crumble. it may well be a screw wouldn’t hold so it’s not dead level.
 
Oh hell so we aren’t talking a simple flocking thing?
This is getting worse and worse.

Yes I suppose he has changed a fair bit, I didn’t realise that much though.

So my next question, what’s my next step?
Go back to the saddler I bought it from, it was second hand so no point in contacting the manufacturer… is there?
Get it looked at by another saddler?
This is so annoying, I really can’t afford to just stop with this horse at the moment

I'd go back to the fitter and explain saddle isn't fit for purpose because its asymmetrical. No amount of flocking will even it out.

Edited because it looks different in new photos

So yeah basically I'd go back to fitter and point out the mismatched stitching/panels and ask for a refund for the saddle. The fitting fees are a goner I'd reckon

Then yeah I'd try and find a new fitter.

Apologies if teaching granny to suck eggs but I find these books helpful.

Practical Saddle Fitting by Ken Lyndon-Dykes

This was the cheapest I could find:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/303588530206?hash=item46af49581e:g:FxsAAOSwz5pgW4Xn&mkevt=1&mkcid=1&mkrid=710-53481-19255-0&campid=5338304675&customid=&toolid=10049

Joyce Harman Pain Free Guide to Saddle Fitting

Again cheapest I could find but they often appear 2nd hand on amazon
https://biblio.co.uk/book/horses-pain-free-back-saddle-fit/d/1468170998
 
I'd go back to the fitter and explain saddle isn't fit for purpose because its asymmetrical. No amount of flocking will even it out.

Edited because it looks different in new photos

So yeah basically I'd go back to fitter and point out the mismatched stitching/panels and ask for a refund for the saddle. The fitting fees are a goner I'd reckon

Then yeah I'd try and find a new fitter.

Apologies if teaching granny to suck eggs but I find these books helpful.

Practical Saddle Fitting by Ken Lyndon-Dykes

This was the cheapest I could find:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/303588530206?hash=item46af49581e:g:FxsAAOSwz5pgW4Xn&mkevt=1&mkcid=1&mkrid=710-53481-19255-0&campid=5338304675&customid=&toolid=10049

Joyce Harman Pain Free Guide to Saddle Fitting

Again cheapest I could find but they often appear 2nd hand on amazon
https://biblio.co.uk/book/horses-pain-free-back-saddle-fit/d/1468170998
Very helpful thank you!
I’ll have a good look. I don’t think I paid a fitting fee to be honest, just the saddle price then the second visit I paid for the adjustments done.
 
As a next bit of info!
Horse has had saddle fit trouble before. Previous owner had a few that it turned out were no good, they settled on an adjusta with this fitter.
My old saddle fitters that I’ve used are the ones who sold his original 2 to the guy I bought the horse from.
As a result I went to the same fitter as the previous owner.
His old Albion was apparently the perfect saddle and he did a bit of eventing etc in it with no problem.
 
Would it be horrific to use a saddle that’s narrow with a riser to lift it but that’s symmetrical? Very short term, and only if he is ok in it.
I’m not sure I want to not ride for weeks then hop on him somewhere new for the first time in ages and break an arm infront of the a new saddler
No it really wouldn't be a good idea as by using a riser you're making it even more narrow. I'm not a saddle fitter but to me the channel isn't wide enough , as in the channel that goes between the panels is too narrow and not wide enough for the horse's ribs. That's why it's lifting at the back. And I suspect it's probably bridging too.

Sadly not all saddle fitters are good even if they are SMS registered. I've used one who just awful, for me and the horse and I rode in a very poor saddle for 6 months, no wonder I kept ending up on the floor !
 
I’ve heard some really bad horror stories lately about really high end saddles, I think there’s some serious issues within the industry currently. It’ll never be as bad as back in the day when you threw anything on your horse but the really good saddle fitters are so rare to find. Forget the fit of the saddle on the horse for a minute, how on earth can anyone ride in that saddle effectively? And all the saddle brands are the same, spending £5k on a saddle does not protect you from the shower of saddle fitting. I’m a bit savage about this topic atm can you tell? ?
 
Would it be horrific to use a saddle that’s narrow with a riser to lift it but that’s symmetrical? Very short term, and only if he is ok in it.
I’m not sure I want to not ride for weeks then hop on him somewhere new for the first time in ages and break an arm infront of the a new saddler

No, I would not do that. With mine, the saddles became too tight at the side of the wither. I did try to lift it, so a wider part of the saddle was at the wider point, but it would not be good enough. I could not get hold of a fitter before camp, so have ended up with a new saddle, fitted by template, being couriered over on a sale or return basis today!

Looking at this photos (as opposed to the first one) I would say that a saddler would say it was within tolerance (especially as secondhand already). I do think, on the second set of photos that yes, it would be reasonable to sell. I would stick it on ebay or Faceache.
 
You can't actually tell much from those photos at all. There is a lack of panel contact, the rear panels are a tiny bit asymmetric, I'd have to see it in the flesh to tell more. It looks overflocked, and if overflocked through the middle then that can cause lack of panel contact at the back. Probably too curvy in the tree but please get a ground line in, ie a photo of the whole horse and the ground, get in closer to the neck to show tree angle, and make sure the front edge of the tree points is 2-3 fingers behind the scapula rear edge on both wide...then girth up.

Asymmetry of horse and rider, saddle slipping as a result (sometimes it's because the saddle is wrong, clearly, but far from always) is the biggest issue with saddle fitting, and so many adjustments are just topping up the flocking on the side it gets compressed ad infinitum. It means your saddle is always in some state of asymmetry and it can only stay symmetrical for a very short time if this pattern isn't fixed. This can even twist trees, and in months, not years.
 
You can't actually tell much from those photos at all. There is a lack of panel contact, the rear panels are a tiny bit asymmetric, I'd have to see it in the flesh to tell more. It looks overflocked, and if overflocked through the middle then that can cause lack of panel contact at the back. Probably too curvy in the tree but please get a ground line in, ie a photo of the whole horse and the ground, get in closer to the neck to show tree angle, and make sure the front edge of the tree points is 2-3 fingers behind the scapula rear edge on both wide...then girth up.

Asymmetry of horse and rider, saddle slipping as a result (sometimes it's because the saddle is wrong, clearly, but far from always) is the biggest issue with saddle fitting, and so many adjustments are just topping up the flocking on the side it gets compressed ad infinitum. It means your saddle is always in some state of asymmetry and it can only stay symmetrical for a very short time if this pattern isn't fixed. This can even twist trees, and in months, not years.

I’d agree that hands on in person is the only way to tell for sure, but those pics certainly give some information, and even if the saddle was placed a little further back I can’t see it making much difference. Given the fit in front, the lack of panel contact at the back, wouldn’t you think that if it’s overflocked in the middle there would be more lift behind and the side view wouldn’t show such an imbalance on that plane?

Re asymmetry (saddle/horse/rider) the problem with saddles is that we’re putting a more or less rigid structure into a living, breathing, changing animal, and then topping it off with a living, breathing, changing human whose skill as a rider is also extremely variable, so it’s a flipping nightmare really. But basic saddle fitting techniques seem to be beyond an alarming number of fitters, and a lot of riders are depending on (and paying for) their advice.
 
I am planning on popping to a local saddlery today and getting an opinion in person, obviously not on the horse but a combo of photos and saddle in reality just to give me more of an idea.
After work before I go I will try and get better pictures, with a ground line, that will be useful for them aswell.


I’m so annoyed at myself for not just manning up and saying if I’m not happy, I find that very difficult with professionals.
 
As far as saddle fitters go, I’m now in a complete dilemma.
How on earth do I find someone now?
This person was highly recommended by several friends personally and I’ve seen the name crop up repeatedly being recommended online.
They are a qualified fitter and master saddler.
To top it all off they are really lovely and pleasant to deal with, and have known the horse far longer than I have!
 
Another to add! Knowing I have a problem I do try to correct it and instructors in the past say I look straight (I don’t feel it)
I’m always very aware of keeping the saddle and myself straight as in if I’m on and it’s tilted I’d fix that not a carry on and my eye is constantly on it.
 
I’d agree that hands on in person is the only way to tell for sure, but those pics certainly give some information, and even if the saddle was placed a little further back I can’t see it making much difference. Given the fit in front, the lack of panel contact at the back, wouldn’t you think that if it’s overflocked in the middle there would be more lift behind and the side view wouldn’t show such an imbalance on that plane?

You're probably right, but it's just not possible to know 100%. As a professional I have to look at it that way, I think it highly likely the tree and panel is the wrong shape, but you just can't be certain from this sort of photo, and without ideally checking that flocking in the middle. With a young horse that's going to change shape there is nearly always some compromise in fundamental shape of the saddle but it's what can be padded/shimmed to keep them happy (flatter tree usually, less flocking, a little too wide than a little too narrow etc) but you have to be able to see/feel all of that to make the decision.

I’m so annoyed at myself for not just manning up and saying if I’m not happy, I find that very difficult with professionals.

You have two weeks to make a complaint or challenge a professional, in most cases. Have a think, drop them a message, say you're concerned, can they reassure you, or could they please pop back out as you don't think it's working because of X.

Another to add! Knowing I have a problem I do try to correct it and instructors in the past say I look straight (I don’t feel it)
I’m always very aware of keeping the saddle and myself straight as in if I’m on and it’s tilted I’d fix that not a carry on and my eye is constantly on it.

So that's evidence to say that any saddle slip could be more down to the saddle, or the horse, than you, but there's straight(ish) as seen by a regular trainer, and truly straight, which to be fair none of us are, but the closer we can get to that the better of course. The horse-saddle-rider equation is a lot more complex than even some saddle fitters realise - for instance Centaur broadly say that horse asymmetry accounts for the vast majority of saddle slip, but how does the horse get and stay wonky?! We at least influence that, so it's very circular and I think trying to draw out causality isn't always helpful.

I do think it's a saddle fit issue, but I have to be a stickler and say what can and what can't be seen from certain photos, and what absolutely needs hands on attention to diagnose.
 
You're probably right, but it's just not possible to know 100%. As a professional I have to look at it that way, I think it highly likely the tree and panel is the wrong shape, but you just can't be certain from this sort of photo, and without ideally checking that flocking in the middle. With a young horse that's going to change shape there is nearly always some compromise in fundamental shape of the saddle but it's what can be padded/shimmed to keep them happy (flatter tree usually, less flocking, a little too wide than a little too narrow etc) but you have to be able to see/feel all of that to make the decision.

I do think it's a saddle fit issue, but I have to be a stickler and say what can and what can't be seen from certain photos, and what absolutely needs hands on attention to diagnose.

And that's another thing isn't it, so many people (saddlers, fitters and riders) believe that shimming and balancing is the work of the devil and that a saddle has to fit day in day out as is.
 
And that's another thing isn't it, so many people (saddlers, fitters and riders) believe that shimming and balancing is the work of the devil and that a saddle has to fit day in day out as is.

Drives me nuts. Cotton numnahs under "well fitting saddles" are not the only answer. I like a good remedial pad for most horses to be fair, they're not supposed to carry us and what a saddle panel can do in terms of shock absorption can be very limited. Stability has to be a priority when selecting one, and I always say, be very clear about what you want a pad to do, then do your research, then get your saddle refitted as necessary!
 
Got the poor boy out of bed, think he’s still asleep ?
This is my old saddle on him.
I feel it’s not as bad a fit as the first?



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First saddle definitely tipping back, looks worse on the nearside which isn't uncommon, it matches the very common rotation of the horse's ribcage to the right. I can't tell the tree angle I'm afraid, it's a tricky photo to take, even the example that I took isn't in quite close enough but you're trying to show the whole saddle wrapping around one side of the horse, taken as directly from the side of the neck as possible - https://www.ahsaddles.com/photos-for-a-saddle-adjustment

The panels on it are making better contact at the back than it looked in the first photos, everything changes when we girth up but it's massively out of balance, and I think the girth straps will work against you.

The darker saddle is in better balance but the tree/panel combo looks too curvy. Again can't tell the width, sorry.
 
Thanks, just to confirm when you say the first saddle, do you mean the original- the K2 that I asked about originally or the Ideal which is first on the above post?
 
Thanks, just to confirm when you say the first saddle, do you mean the original- the K2 that I asked about originally or the Ideal which is first on the above post?

Not Sbloom but I think she is only commenting on the two sets of recent pictures that show full horse.

I also think the yellow saddle is tipping back. All the weight would be in the cantle area. I'd not ride in that saddle.
 
Might widening it help? Bringing it down at the front

You just can't say - for a saddle I had fitted myself, knew the horse and the tree/panel set up I could say whether I thought widening would work or not, but occasionally Id be wrong, hands on is the only way. Widening to rebalance may reveal other issues with the fit and cause other problems. It looks like it needs to come down maybe 2-3 cm which is likely to be 1-2 tree sizes, which can't be guaranteed not to affect the rest of the fit, and would at minimum need significant flocking adjustments.

And yes, Impala tipping back massively (confused myself as to the first set of photos and what they showed initially), Albion looks roughly in balance but too curvy, probably.
 
An attempt at that angle with both.
So I suppose my question now is that is this saddle a saddle that has just altered too much since I’ve had it, a horse that’s changed shape in which case I can go back to the saddler who I got it from and px for something else
OR is it a saddle that’s totally wrong for the horse meaning I need to go elsewhere and start afresh
Or worst case of it a faulty saddle
 
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