Tinypony
Well-Known Member
I think it's a bit hard to see dead eyes at that distance and in a video. I agree that some of the youngsters might be a bit overwhelmed, but I do think that sometimes people mistake relaxed for something shut down. Ears don't have to be pricked forward for a horse to be relaxed and thinking. Any horse can look hesitant and nervous when working in an arena in front of a crowd, particularly when they haven't done it much. All of our competing horses started somewhere (and possibly in some cases not as gentle an introduction as this).
I think the aims of this are really good, and these little babies should make great ridden horses one day. If you can manage to deal with the fact that dressage is just as much about asking a horse to do something as this is (possibly more testing on them sometimes) then I don't see anything wrong with this at all. I saw some lovely ponies treated much worse by children, under instruction, at a clear round jumping evening only last week. Why the need to pick everything apart so critically in minute detail on this forum? I see much more unhappy and shut down horses than this every time I go to a competitive event in this country. Which is why I don't go often.
I think the aims of this are really good, and these little babies should make great ridden horses one day. If you can manage to deal with the fact that dressage is just as much about asking a horse to do something as this is (possibly more testing on them sometimes) then I don't see anything wrong with this at all. I saw some lovely ponies treated much worse by children, under instruction, at a clear round jumping evening only last week. Why the need to pick everything apart so critically in minute detail on this forum? I see much more unhappy and shut down horses than this every time I go to a competitive event in this country. Which is why I don't go often.
