Jingleballs
Well-Known Member
I've had my dressage saddle for year. I got it checked again in early April with a qualified saddle fitter and we also used the pressure pad to identify and fix any pressure issues that would not necessarily be obvious to the eye.
It fitted fine at first but I've noticed recently that it is tending to slip foward - this happens especially on a hack with lots of downhill or when doing canter work.
My instructor had a look last night and advised that it seems to be the girth that is pulling it slightly forward due to my lads slightly larger summer tummy (he's just had a couple of weeks off due to an abscess and therefore is a bit more rotund than usual!).
The actually fit (when the saddle stays put) is perfect but how do I stop it slipping? I tried putting my prolite pad under it but it still slipped, I have a sheepskin half pad that might work. My saddle already has the Y girth straps so I wonder if moving the first girth strap forward will help stop this? Or a non slip pad between the saddle and saddle cloth?
Or is there a better girth for more round, cobby tummies that might be the answer?
Any ideas welcome - I'm hoping now he is back in work that he'll shift the weight again so I'd like to not spend a fortune on a temporary solution.
It fitted fine at first but I've noticed recently that it is tending to slip foward - this happens especially on a hack with lots of downhill or when doing canter work.
My instructor had a look last night and advised that it seems to be the girth that is pulling it slightly forward due to my lads slightly larger summer tummy (he's just had a couple of weeks off due to an abscess and therefore is a bit more rotund than usual!).
The actually fit (when the saddle stays put) is perfect but how do I stop it slipping? I tried putting my prolite pad under it but it still slipped, I have a sheepskin half pad that might work. My saddle already has the Y girth straps so I wonder if moving the first girth strap forward will help stop this? Or a non slip pad between the saddle and saddle cloth?
Or is there a better girth for more round, cobby tummies that might be the answer?
Any ideas welcome - I'm hoping now he is back in work that he'll shift the weight again so I'd like to not spend a fortune on a temporary solution.