Auslander
Well-Known Member
I've probably just got out of bed on the wrong side this morning, but this has been bothering me for a while!
We all have our moments - and I'll happily hold my hands up and admit to having got it completely wrong and taken a horses back teeth out over a fence on more than one occasion.
Looking at photos on here though, I see SO many pics of people jumping in non "Arggh" situations, yet their hands are still firmly fixed near the horses withers.
I've had it burned into my brain that hanging onto a horses back teeth over a fence is a crime punishable by death, and my automatic reaction if things go wrong is to chuck the reins at the horse and use my legs and set to keep myself in the plate. If its gone really really wrong, I grab a handful of mane half way up the neck to help my get my balance back, whilst interfering with the horses mouth as little as poss.
On the rare occasion that I haven't spectacularly naffed it up, my default hand position is just in front of the shoulder blade, about half way between the withers and the point of the shoulder. Straight line from the elbow to the horses mouth, one hand on either side of the neck, with a soft elbow so that the horse can take your hand forward if he needs to.
I also hate seeing hands half way up the crest of the neck, although I conceded that at least they are forward.
I'm sure a lot of it is to do with instability/insecurity, which seems to be a modern problem. I know I'm getting old, but it saddens me that health and safety seems to be killing off some of the things we used to do in the old days that resulted in secure seats and riders who didn't use their horses back teeth to balance over a fence.
Bring back bareback gridwork with no reins I say.
We all have our moments - and I'll happily hold my hands up and admit to having got it completely wrong and taken a horses back teeth out over a fence on more than one occasion.
Looking at photos on here though, I see SO many pics of people jumping in non "Arggh" situations, yet their hands are still firmly fixed near the horses withers.
I've had it burned into my brain that hanging onto a horses back teeth over a fence is a crime punishable by death, and my automatic reaction if things go wrong is to chuck the reins at the horse and use my legs and set to keep myself in the plate. If its gone really really wrong, I grab a handful of mane half way up the neck to help my get my balance back, whilst interfering with the horses mouth as little as poss.
On the rare occasion that I haven't spectacularly naffed it up, my default hand position is just in front of the shoulder blade, about half way between the withers and the point of the shoulder. Straight line from the elbow to the horses mouth, one hand on either side of the neck, with a soft elbow so that the horse can take your hand forward if he needs to.
I also hate seeing hands half way up the crest of the neck, although I conceded that at least they are forward.
I'm sure a lot of it is to do with instability/insecurity, which seems to be a modern problem. I know I'm getting old, but it saddens me that health and safety seems to be killing off some of the things we used to do in the old days that resulted in secure seats and riders who didn't use their horses back teeth to balance over a fence.
Bring back bareback gridwork with no reins I say.