marmalade76
Well-Known Member
My ponies all actively like being ridden, as in they will come to the gate and wait pointedly at riding (not feeding) time, they will sulk if they don’t get their turn and I have had one or two attempt to invite themselves on hacks through the fence! My one who has sharers starts standing at the gate just waiting for hours if they are away and have not come on schedule. She misses ‘her’ kids.
In general the kids’ ponies will attempt to figure out how to get their bridles on themselves if their child is taking too long - it’s very funny to watch. Equally, they know which tack is theirs and how it should feel so tend to assist there also, nuzzling the right pad or raising a head to eyeball me and call me over if the kid has put something on wrong. They are encouraged to express themselves and as a result we know if something isn’t right. That makes riding comfortable for them and fun. Equally, we let them choose what they like to do as a ‘job’. If one doesn’t like to jump beyond odd logs, we don’t. If one doesn’t like schooling, we do the minimum for their health only. If one wants to be a tiny tot’s lead rein pony, they get to choose that life. So everyone gets to do things they like and they are able to tell us if anything is uncomfortable. At that point, riding is entertainment for everyone.
That said, all are relatively young and healthy, so any who hang back at catching time are carefully investigated to find out why. My son’s pony had a ‘not catching’ moment last month. All checks done, issue narrowed down to saddle. Changed saddle, the next day she was happy again. She’s funny though - if he doesn’t ride her first she gets the hump and behaves like a slighted teenager. Don’t we know how important she is? Likewise one of the others has what we think are melanomas near the girth. Vet said wait and see. She has become a little more sensitive at catching time even though I triple check nothing is pressing on them so I have booked them to be removed. She isn’t herself. She normally loves her girl and her adventures and is eager to come in.
My TB struggled hugely with retirement at first. She missed the entertainment, the individual attention, going out to patrol ‘her’ range as it were. I had to get some youngsters for her to bring up to provide the entertainment in the field instead!
Young ones who grow up here do so desperate to join in - my 2 year olds are already bothering me about coming with, and once they realise aged 3 that a rider = being off lead, most are wildly enthusiastic. I will never forget one little unbacked pony - half way round a hack being ponied she downed tools and had a small pony tantrum about being led. So I popped my son on and he rode her home. She was beyond delighted. Walked and trotted with the ride like she had done it all her life!!
I had one in particular that loved being ridden even though he had health issues, it's like it boosted his ego, he seemed to look at our other ponies smugly, " see, I'm number 1!" He loved attention and being ridden meant attention. I've had a few attention junkies and one that was a dreadful show off, if more people/new people were around, the more he would show off. I swear he had a sense of humour too, he was an arab.I had an ex polo pony that took to flatwork/schooling, he loved it, it was his thing. He had made it clear he didn't want to play polo anymore, apparently he'd played high goal then started dumping whoever was riding him and would then leg it so he was sold age 7 to me. He was obviously comfortable enough to let whoever was in charge know that he wasn't happy with his work and school work he seemed to love, better than being yanked around on the polo field.
Another, a cob I loaned, had been in a riding school for a bit, he'd make it clear if he didn't like doing something and would get rid of you if you dared use a stick on him, even just a tickle. Yet big group hacks he loved and if you took him on a fun ride or something he'd be smug for days afterwards, again, it was like it did something for his ego.
I'm another who will allow them to snack on a ride as long as they don't take the pee, if we're going to ask them to do these jobs, there must be something in it for them. I like my horses to be happy and comfortable enough to give an opinion, I want them to interact with me and other people around them and whilst I expect good manners, I don't want under the thumb robots either.