frankieduck
Well-Known Member
Has anyone ridden or trained a horse like this and have any tips?
I’m schooling my horse for eventing, he previously hunted and arrived with very little basic schooling. He’s bold as brass over a fence- albeit at 100mph! We’ve worked hard on this, and I can now collect him somewhat before a jump. But the issue is on landing- he loves to chuck his head down, and it’s a pain.
I don’t think I’m catching him in the mouth (at least my trainer says I’m not and generally I err on the side of being TOO light with my hand). ). I think it is potentially mostly a learned way of going from his hunting days of ‘land and gallop’ - and partly that he’s just a big lad with a huge canter who lands strung out and needs a second to rebalance.
The problem is:
- If I keep the contact, I nearly get towed over his head (hasn’t happened yet, but my core is getting a workout!)
- If I slip my reins, he takes full advantage and tanks off for a few strides before I can gather him back up
Are there any exercises or tweaks to my riding that might help? Or is this just a case of patience and repetition?
I’m 99% sure it’s a training thing, not pain-related- he had a full MOT at the vets (including X-rays) three months ago to rule anything out going on with his back, sees the physio every three months, and has his saddles professionally checked every six months. He also does the exact same thing free-schooling—lands, throws his head down, and has a full-on ‘yee haa’ moment.
I do have regular lessons (weekly or twice weekly), and my trainer keeps reassuring me that it’s not my riding - it’s just that my horse needs to figure things out and learn a new way of going, but I would really love some ideas on how I can help him more!
I’m schooling my horse for eventing, he previously hunted and arrived with very little basic schooling. He’s bold as brass over a fence- albeit at 100mph! We’ve worked hard on this, and I can now collect him somewhat before a jump. But the issue is on landing- he loves to chuck his head down, and it’s a pain.
I don’t think I’m catching him in the mouth (at least my trainer says I’m not and generally I err on the side of being TOO light with my hand). ). I think it is potentially mostly a learned way of going from his hunting days of ‘land and gallop’ - and partly that he’s just a big lad with a huge canter who lands strung out and needs a second to rebalance.
The problem is:
- If I keep the contact, I nearly get towed over his head (hasn’t happened yet, but my core is getting a workout!)
- If I slip my reins, he takes full advantage and tanks off for a few strides before I can gather him back up
Are there any exercises or tweaks to my riding that might help? Or is this just a case of patience and repetition?
I’m 99% sure it’s a training thing, not pain-related- he had a full MOT at the vets (including X-rays) three months ago to rule anything out going on with his back, sees the physio every three months, and has his saddles professionally checked every six months. He also does the exact same thing free-schooling—lands, throws his head down, and has a full-on ‘yee haa’ moment.
I do have regular lessons (weekly or twice weekly), and my trainer keeps reassuring me that it’s not my riding - it’s just that my horse needs to figure things out and learn a new way of going, but I would really love some ideas on how I can help him more!