Auslander
Well-Known Member
You could be right NN.
A - have you tried booting his confidence? You could start by calling him handsome for example.![]()
I do! All the time. He thinks his name is Handsome...
You could be right NN.
A - have you tried booting his confidence? You could start by calling him handsome for example.![]()
Yes just like me! Then, I got a proper horse and I don't have to squint anymore.![]()
Oh no they're not....TBs and warmbloods are proper horses. Cobs are cute (sometimes) fluffies![]()
Actualeeeeeee.... Hate to say this but only andalusians are proper horses. The rest are Heinz 57s....
Tee hee![]()
Atualeeee - you is totes right!Actualeeeeeee.... Hate to say this but only andalusians are proper horses. The rest are Heinz 57s....
Tee hee![]()
I don't like cobs.
I like donkeys!
![]()
I love my new cobblet,he's got a lot of character and is very cheeky to go with it.lol
Bit naughty with the electric fence,pulls it down.![]()
Oh dear, what shall we do with this one.... ?![]()
My name is Trasa and. '" whispers quietly"... I like donkeys too.:
See, not just me![]()
Donkeys have such freely flowing paces that mine could beat any fancy pancy warmblood in dressage, and Jack jumped (clambered) over a gate to get to my neighbours mares once. So he has plenty of scope for showjumping!
His massive ears are so long you probably wouldn't need reins for steering if you were to ride him, cheaper than buying reins![]()
I will never understand it.
They are fat, lazy, hairier than Bigfoot, and usually bad tempered.
Their paces are so stilted, that they look as though they've had their legs tied together, which gives the rider a nasty jolty ride.
I suppose I can understand riding schools having them, for the scaredy novices, but once you can rise to the trot, surely you'd buy a decent blood horse, or at least a Warmblood?
Your thoughts?
S![]()
They are not all lazy go and watch the show cobs some of those have a lot of get up and go.
I will never understand it.
They are fat, lazy, hairier than Bigfoot, and usually bad tempered.
Their paces are so stilted, that they look as though they've had their legs tied together, which gives the rider a nasty jolty ride.
I suppose I can understand riding schools having them, for the scaredy novices, but once you can rise to the trot, surely you'd buy a decent blood horse, or at least a Warmblood?
Your thoughts?
S![]()
I can see that if someone has never ridden proper horses, they might mistakenly think a cob that occasionally breaks into a (no doubt) disunited canter is a forwards ride, or pleasant. But don't worry, once you've tried a proper horse, you'll be able to see the difference.
Proper horse= good to ride to hounds.
Cob= good to feed to hounds.