shortstuff99
Well-Known Member
She looks totally fine! Built in the more traditional way then the modern morphology Spanish horses which are huge!! Bean is barely pushing 15 hands but is tough as, don't fret
Well done for worrying about your horse! Riding horses raises big ethical questions, and we should all be worrying whether we are the right weight, have the right saddle, in the right environment/set up etc. It's the ones who DON'T worry that worry me. My horse is a similar build but different breeding and I (rightly) have similar concerns. He was fine legs and small feet with a wide, deep body above. I get similar comments. I do everything I can to keep the weight he has to carry down and also to keep a careful eye on his own weight. I also use hoof boots for turn out if the ground is very hard.People at the yard comment on how fine she is. I guess no one is used to seeing that kind of horse!
Just a little note; "long, slow miles" in walk is the traditional English way, however with young horses it is IME better to teach them to lift the back and build the muscles needed to carry the rider by frequent transitions up and down through WTC, and with changes in direction and exercises like figure of 8 and serpentine in short schooling sessions. Walking, especially slow walking, doesn't lift the back and it is not something I would do a great deal of with my youngsters, relaxing and enjoyable though it is I'm sure.Thanks guys.
People also comment that she is beautiful and kind. Those are nice comments.
They probably think I'm faffing about a lot, just hacking in mostly walk and not really schooling, but I am happy taking my time producing her with our long, slow miles. The culture at the barn is very traditional - bit them up and get them schooling WTC pretty quickly. I look like a weirdo, ambling around in my Western hackamore.
Just a little note; "long, slow miles" in walk is the traditional English way, however with young horses it is IME better to teach them to lift the back and build the muscles needed to carry the rider by frequent transitions up and down through WTC, and with changes in direction and exercises like figure of 8 and serpentine in short schooling sessions. Walking, especially slow walking, doesn't lift the back and it is not something I would do a great deal of with my youngsters, relaxing and enjoyable though it is I'm sure.
Further note - Spanish horses typically have dainty feet, my last PRE chap took a 13.2 pony-size shoe (or would have, had he worn them, which he never did). They often bamboozle farriers in this part of the world, unless they have experience of them.