Jenna1406
Well-Known Member
As title really.
Apart from in hand showing, what else should we be doing this year?
Thanks
Apart from in hand showing, what else should we be doing this year?
Thanks
I would put full tack on, begin long lining and walk out on the roads with a sensible horse. No weight on the back yet though
Lots of work on the ground such as getting used to tack, boots and being fiddled around with etc. Walk out in hand in tack and eventually a bit of long reining i'd say. With all that in place you should be good to go for backing next yearGood luck
Agree with others, in hand walking, full tack on, long reining. Getting them used to being tied up, bathed etc., if not already done. Groundwork involving scary objects such as tarpaulins, umberella's, traffic cones etc.
If you're showing him, he's getting handled, washed, travelled etc so plenty of education as it is and it's surprising how much that will take it out of him and make him stale so for me the rest of his time should be spent being allowed to be a baby with other company his own age and turned away. You want to make him old before his time if you do anything else with him, poor boy.
Would you just getting a crap*y saddle to use for this to get her used to full tack?? I have a saddle fror my other horse but dont fancy using that as its a good one.
I am going to get tarpolin at the weekend, think we have cones etc in our jumping paddock (which is next to a train track and quarry road).
As a rising 2 yr old, in hand showing and the handling that will come with that is enough for her age. Let her be a baby, to many people do far to much to soon.
As a rising 2 yr old, in hand showing and the handling that will come with that is enough for her age. Let her be a baby, to many people do far to much to soon.
Thank goodness for some sense.
Apart from basic handling and ground manners, begger all. My rising 3 year old is polite on the ground and walks out in traffic with others. Other than abit of long lining he will be left until next year. There is a lot of growing going on in these first few years. Let her be a horse.
These.
Sounds like she already has had good experiences and good manners. Let her be a baby. I would even consider looking to put her elsewhere with others of a similar age.
I would not even consider long reining or introducing a saddle for at least another year.
It can be frustrating waiting for them to grow up and be ready- patience is needed. Once every few months is pointless- leaving her in the field is the best thing you can do IMO.
Thanks. Putting her somewhere else wouldnt work as there isnt anywhere near me that would do this (I live in Inverness), livery yards are few and few between up here as it is, without having to travel miles. I already drive 10 miles there and 10 miles back, so to put her somewhere else would cost a fortune.
Ahh, fair enough.
It sounds as though you have given her a solid start already, I would give her an easy year, enjoy handling her, get her out to a couple of shows as you have planned and keep building slowly on the foundation you have got. She sounds lovely!
Personally I wouldn't do any more than you are doing already. Over the 12 years I've bred foals I've found that it actually makes very little difference to the backing process if you don't do anything with them between 1 and 3 as long as they have had basic handling (catching, leading, grooming, etc) when they are foals. I used to be a fan of desensitizing them as youngsters but it really does seem to come down to their individual personalities when it comes to backing them.
I do like my youngsters to be allowed to be youngsters and spend as much time out in the field with their peers and a couple of older horses to show them what is what. If you don't have the facilities to do this where you are it would be worth having a look at local studs to see if your youngster can run with theirs.