Stenners
Well-Known Member
My daughter is almost 2.5 and I would love her to start having some little lessons but I know most riding schools don't take children under 4. What age did you start your children with lessons?
I was on a horse from 2 years of age and have never looked back!Children went for a lead out ride at 2 and 4. A treat staying with my brother. Grand children ditto. But child who rode at 2 never got on a pony or horse again (though her daughter rides.)
With grand children the opposite. The 4 year old was so good they had her trot a lot on her first lead out and it must have scared her as she has never ridden again. This is not a nervous child. She is an expert in line roller blade skater and a uni football enthusiast. The grand child who was sat on a pony and taken out aged 2 had weekly lead out rides from 6 and started proper lessons at 8. She is now a competent adult rider.
I must have been somewhere between 18 months and 2 years old when I first rode on a donkey at Scarborough beach...
I don't think you can really give a child "lessons" until the child has enough language to understand simple explanations like how to hold the reins and some children (even adults) never really get the difference between left and right.
I think that for a child of under five, it would be enough to have the child sitting on the pony, the pony being led around by an adult, and just use that experience for the child to get used to the sensation of movement.
I took my nephew and niece to ride a couple of summers ago, just the two of them, and a girl from the riding centre and I led the ponies.
Their mother supposedly takes them to ride every Saturday at a centre near Barnsley.
My niece was fine, but my nephew got quite unsettled and scared at times when we were going uphill or downhill on a stony path, because he's not used to the front end of the animal being higher or lower than the back end and he thought he was going to go over its shoulder or its rump.
And when his pony started kicking at its own belly (I think to get rid of flies), he started to panic because there was now more side-to-side movement.