vhf
Well-Known Member
That’s another thing. Why did New Zealand rugs have such huge necks?! Did they even fit anything properly?!
The canvas ones stretched like nothing on earth, usually the first time they got wet!!
That’s another thing. Why did New Zealand rugs have such huge necks?! Did they even fit anything properly?!
could say the same for pony rugs now they seem to have horse necks but shorter skirtsThat’s another thing. Why did New Zealand rugs have such huge necks?! Did they even fit anything properly?!
could say the same for pony rugs now they seem to have horse necks but shorter skirts
So many memories, I am glad I wasnt the only person who rode an imaginary horse alongside the car on long journeys, it certainly passed the time.
I didn't own a horse until my mid 20's, I went to riding schools, had lessons and helped when I was older, also riding some of the more tricky ponies at one riding school with the owners daughter. I also had a pony on loan. I learned so much from those ponies and horses...
could say the same for pony rugs now they seem to have horse necks but shorter skirts
It depends on the make these days I think. I remember as a child everything had bald shoulders If it was rugged.
Hacking out for hours on the roads on my own aged 12.
No rugs at all for ponies, one new-Zealand for a horse.
Nickel bits and stirrups that we polished til they were hot to get a shine.
No supplements.
No equine dentist
No horse physio
No pink horse stuff
I used to borrow our neighbours dog and go over the jumps with her. I used to make them higher and longer and we both loved it! If the dog wasn't available, I always reverted to the mop or broom!![]()
Lordy! Yesss to all the above. How the heck did we survive!!
I remember hacking to a show 8 miles away, competing, and hacking back again, all on my own when I was 14! Only the "rich people" had transport in those days, it wasn't something that everyone had (like colour TV!). People now use a box/trailer for something just a stones-throw away! Talk about cossetted!!
Or you watch hit the ground before you did!You forgot to mention my cork lined ‘hard hat’ which used to follow me over jumps at the full extent of the piece of thin elastic that comprised the chin strap.
That's fantastic 😊This thread is brilliant! I remember all the things that have been mentioned, they are bringing back so many happy memories😊. My family was poor so no pony or lessons for me but I’d walk miles just to look at them in fields and dream... I’d ride (and fall off) anything when given the chance. Saved up for a grooming kit - all natural materials, no plastic in those days- for the pony I couldn’t afford. My first riding lesson was 2 1/2 years ago aged 61 and last year me and my gorgeous rs horse and won the Summer Dressage Championship. I’m living the childhood I always wanted and never had.
I remember many of these things - 65 now. Iused to have a riding lesson once a week from being 6.
When I was 12, I started riding for a traveller who had settled down and had grazing right on 500 acres of common ground called The Lines in Medaway Kent. Anyone else remember the horses there? We used to catch up and ride with headcollars to save carrying tack. My favourite pony once ran away with me across the top of the hill, following a couple of loose ones I'd been trying to herd back to the field. Some Ameriican tourists were very impressed apparently! As others have said, no Health and safety concerns there. Engine oil in the hooves so we could hack in the snow. We all survived
Does anyone remember when the local saddlery and equestrian outfitters had shops on the local High Street instead of miles away in rural areas ?
Are you sure you aren't a time traveller? My grandfather told me that was exactly what he and his sister used to do: catch up gypsy ponies on The Lines and then ride them only he was born in 1902! He gave up riding when he went to sea at age 13 (he lied about his age) so saw World War 1 out as a gunner, then was due to leave in '39 but was retained for the entire 2nd world war too. He did ride occasionally when ashore in foreign ports.
We might have been able to afford riding lessons for me as a child but I think they were afraid I would settle on horses for a career, hence I had to wait till I was away at college in Yorkshire and aged 19 in 1969. I, and others, learned to ride in Menston where we had Merely a Major, half brother to Merely a Monarch; this horse was used in the TV series Hadleigh and ridden by Gerald Harper. We also had the opportunity to upset Harvey Smith if we put the stables horses in the wrong field, and a 15 mile ride to the blacksmith in Otley!
Later in the early 70s I rode from Wansford near Peterborough and on a Sunday afternoon regularly rode down the central reservation of the A1 to put horses in the field on the other side of the dual carriageway.
When I had my own horse about '76 I regularly rode her around Peterborough city centre to go to the vets in Park Road: no call out fees for me! I also treated the dual carriageway verges as bridleways.
None of the above may be possible now, except perhaps upsetting Harvey.
My grandparents owned one in Shrewsbury and one in Tenbury Wells!Does anyone remember when the local saddlery and equestrian outfitters had shops on the local High Street instead of miles away in rural areas ?
Ah, yes. I taught our dog to jump which she put to good use for getting out of the garden until dad put an extension on the fence.I got in trouble for teaching the neighbour's dog to jump - she then started jumping out of their garden!!
Reading 'The Observer Book of Horses and Ponies' from cover to cover and picking which breeds you wanted in your imaginary stables
Cycling to the farm in the pitch dark before school and hacking round the housing estate with just a bicycle lamp tied to your stirrup with baler twine, getting changed in the stables and running for the school bus.
Sunday dinner 'in the oven' because you were never home from the farm in time.
OK, so how many of these things do you still do/use
I'll start:
drums/barrels as jump stands
reading thelwell books
rope halters
natural bristle brushes and linen teatowels as a stable rubber
and I've still got ponies!!