rabatsa
Confuddled
Grandfather rights?
Personally I think all kids should be shot
This reminded me of a certain Roald Dahl character. And a quick Google, quite appropriately for this thread, threw this as the first result. 😂
Then we should make better simulators. Fit at least to teach rising trot with independent hands. I despair for every poor pony being used to teach that to child beginners, and adults are even worse.
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That's sadI agree, early stages of riding should be taught on a simulator.
The riding school I learnt at, the ponies had it good, they only got used in lessons on the weekend and then it was only two hours of mostly walk with the odd trot and canter. The rest of the week they were turned out 24/7.
The horses however had an awful deal. No turnout. They only left their box to be ridden. There was a big 17.2hh odd horse there called Genius. He was in his thirties if I recall. He was ancient. He would weave all day and pull faces at anyone who walked past. He has these two overweight twin girls who regularly rode him, he was so sour to the school that they used to literally have to beat him round in canter. I was too young and naïve to see it then but looking back the existence this horse had to endure was sickening. The poor old chap should have been out in a field somewhere with friends, maybe a quiet hack if he was up to it, not the torture they had him endure so they could make money.
Let's go back to the old days when learners had to 'earn' their reins and stirrups. This means they will have to repeatedly remount and stop snivelling but eventually they will develop a truly independent seat and light hands. We'll let them have a saddle, we're not savages!
This will also solve the obesity problem as they are likely to sustain the type of injuries which will make it very difficult for them to open the biscuit tin.
You're welcome.
Let's go back to the old days when learners had to 'earn' their reins and stirrups. This means they will have to repeatedly remount and stop snivelling but eventually they will develop a truly independent seat and light hands. We'll let them have a saddle, we're not savages!
This will also solve the obesity problem as they are likely to sustain the type of injuries which will make it very difficult for them to open the biscuit tin.
You're welcome.
They'd definitely help with balance anyway. It would mean the rider wouldn't be balancing off the reins.I disagree. The hard part for the horse is the real beginner. They have to get up there to start with! they have to repeat and repeat to learn how to control landing on the horse's back. They have to learn to sit there and get the idea of being up on a horse, do "around the world" generally move their bodies around until they get acclimatised. Kids may learn that quickly but adults take a lot longer and provide a lot more discomfort for the horse. How much easier for them (and the horse) for them to use a basic simulator to learn the very basics rather than be dragged round on a leading rein trying to get everything at once. As for the horse spooking real beginners are a long way off worrying about that.
Some of the Heather Moffett videos showing trotting and cantering on her simulators and they seem to be pretty good and realistic.
I have always thought that with a good selection of simulators (basic to very realistic) on one side of the riding lessons and then horse handling/leading the horse type exercises/ recognising horse behaviour on the other side of the lesson beginners could learn quite a lot about horses and riding without causing the horse too much discomfort and could progress more quickly.
No problem in agreeing the licenses' for kids part.
It's very rude to post photos of other posters without their permission y'know...
Oops, sorry Shils!
Bugger.... sussed!Bit sexist. Grandmothers can be rubbish riders too...
They shouldn't call it rising trot either. It makes it sound like you're supposed to be standing up and down in the stirrups. It took me ages to get out of that habit.
Thats funnyA lot of riders in Japan learnt on simulators because it's cheaper than a real horse over there, apparently.
There was a lovely Japanese chap at the yard where I trained. He had a beautiful position and looked great on a horse but fell off with monotonous regularity as he never expected the horse to move randomly!
I actually meant myself, but I like your way better!
Bugger.... sussed!
From social media I knew it wasn't you, but I hadn't recognised Shils 🙈
Had to Google postillions I'm not sure what I'd call it. I'll have a think🤔Well, it used to be called posting, after the riding style of the postillions.
How would you have ridden it then? 😂
Sadly, yes am granny x 1 and step grannie x 3 ☺ am rocking to 60 now, despite haring around playing Pullein Thompson games 😂If the saddle fits... bounce up and down on it until you flop off like a blancmange on a bad day?
(are you really a grandmother? I only know about your fuzzies!)
Sadly, yes am granny x 1 and step grannie x 3 ☺ am rocking to 60 now, despite haring around playing Pullein Thompson games 😂
as this thread was about discomfort/pain to the horse so you can learn the rising trot by bouncing around the school on the long suffering horse until it "clicks" either on or off a lunge rein or you learn it this way. No contest in my opinion.
the rider learns riding trot at 2.50 minutes in and the "horse" here isn't suffering at all.
Sadly, yes am granny x 1 and step grannie x 3 ☺ am rocking to 60 now, despite haring around playing Pullein Thompson games 😂