Fionamarie
Active Member
Hi, I have just bought a new saddle and the saddle fitter fitted it with a pad that had shimmies in the back? My gut tells me this is wrong and the saddle should be fitted without. What do other people think?
I would always recommend going back to the fitter and asking for an explanation. If I fit a new saddle with one my customer has a fair bit of paperwork with it explaining the whys and wherefores and yes, it's frequently to cope with muscle loss, or some kind of physical or gain asymmetry/abnormality. Occasionally, very occasionally, a horse will have one long term, but it's rare and is usually down to a quirk of that horse preferring a particular type of panel shape for example that won't balance well on its back. I'm not sure I've met a horse yet that needs one simply because of the natural shape of its back.
I am trying with the saddle fitter but unfortunately she wont respond to any contact. I am left with an expensive saddle which doesnt fit properly and a pad with shims that she sold me![/QUOTE
Whats the saddle doing ?
Why did you let the saddler sell you a new saddle that needs a raiser pad without understanding what was going on ?
Its extremely bad the saddler wont return your calls you need to keep trying .
I am left with an expensive saddle which doesnt fit properly and a pad with shims that she sold me!
Im certainly not a saddle fitter but I wouldnt be happy with a new saddle that requires shims to make it fit. I tried one of these pads under a saddle when my horse lost topline and found that it made it bridge and cause more pressure on the points of the saddle.