jkitten
Well-Known Member
To be upfront, I am coming at this from a position of total ignorance and am hoping to learn from the collective wisdom of the forum. Right now I don't have a position for or against. I've tried to make the post title as un-baity as possible.
For context, when I learned to ride at a riding school 20-25 years ago, whips were standard, everybody carried one and they were used to encourage speed. Not talking about wailing on the horse, but it was accepted that there were certain horses that needed quite a hard smack on the bum to get them into a decent stride during the first canter of the class, even in the upper classes. The instructor would tell the student to use the whip if she felt it necessary, and after that the horse would pick up the pace and not need anything except leg for the rest of the class.
Fast forward to now, I returned to riding last year at a small riding school that is generally very caring and meticulous about their horses' well-being. From the start every horse they have given me has been reasonably off the leg so I don't know if they use the whip in the same way as my old riding school, but they do use it to remind the horse of its manners (sorry the phrasing is awkward, I can't think of any other way to put it). For example, the first horse I rode there had a tendency to slow from a canter to a trot in the gate corner of the school, but I found if I have her a tap on the shoulder a stride or two before she would sail around quite happily that time and for the rest of the lesson. This was in one of my first returning lessons, though, so maybe now that I have improved somewhat I might not need it, I don't know. Regardless, after I did that my instructor complimented me on 'knowing the horse and riding accordingly'. There have been a couple of other instances in the 18 months since when he has told me to 'give him/her a tap on the shoulder', always when the horse is clearly making itself awkward on purpose. So far it has always worked and the horse stops whatever it was doing and returned to being polite. He is usually highly attentive to the horse's comfort and well-being when being ridden, and normally is very focussed on teaching his students to ride in a way that is most comfortable for the horse, that will not confuse or distress them, etc, which I just mention because I have read stories here of some instructors encouraging whip use who very much don't sound like they are.
I didn't really think anything of using the whip in this way when warranted, until this evening I was speaking to a horsey friend (with much more experience than myself), who mentioned that she felt the whip had fallen out of favour in modern times. I'm now wondering what other people think? Is it a useful/legitimate aid, or has it had its day and I should look to start riding without?
Edit: Apologies in advance if this is one of those 'done to death' topics, I did try some googling and searching on the forum but all I could come up with was racing specific, which I think is a different kettle of fish altogether?
For context, when I learned to ride at a riding school 20-25 years ago, whips were standard, everybody carried one and they were used to encourage speed. Not talking about wailing on the horse, but it was accepted that there were certain horses that needed quite a hard smack on the bum to get them into a decent stride during the first canter of the class, even in the upper classes. The instructor would tell the student to use the whip if she felt it necessary, and after that the horse would pick up the pace and not need anything except leg for the rest of the class.
Fast forward to now, I returned to riding last year at a small riding school that is generally very caring and meticulous about their horses' well-being. From the start every horse they have given me has been reasonably off the leg so I don't know if they use the whip in the same way as my old riding school, but they do use it to remind the horse of its manners (sorry the phrasing is awkward, I can't think of any other way to put it). For example, the first horse I rode there had a tendency to slow from a canter to a trot in the gate corner of the school, but I found if I have her a tap on the shoulder a stride or two before she would sail around quite happily that time and for the rest of the lesson. This was in one of my first returning lessons, though, so maybe now that I have improved somewhat I might not need it, I don't know. Regardless, after I did that my instructor complimented me on 'knowing the horse and riding accordingly'. There have been a couple of other instances in the 18 months since when he has told me to 'give him/her a tap on the shoulder', always when the horse is clearly making itself awkward on purpose. So far it has always worked and the horse stops whatever it was doing and returned to being polite. He is usually highly attentive to the horse's comfort and well-being when being ridden, and normally is very focussed on teaching his students to ride in a way that is most comfortable for the horse, that will not confuse or distress them, etc, which I just mention because I have read stories here of some instructors encouraging whip use who very much don't sound like they are.
I didn't really think anything of using the whip in this way when warranted, until this evening I was speaking to a horsey friend (with much more experience than myself), who mentioned that she felt the whip had fallen out of favour in modern times. I'm now wondering what other people think? Is it a useful/legitimate aid, or has it had its day and I should look to start riding without?
Edit: Apologies in advance if this is one of those 'done to death' topics, I did try some googling and searching on the forum but all I could come up with was racing specific, which I think is a different kettle of fish altogether?
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