olderridercg
Member
Hi. I have been having lessons at an excellent riding centre for several years but regretably had to stop having lessons. The main reasons being that as an older rider with a hearing impairment I had difficulty hearing what the RI was telling me to do in both group and private lessons. I did explain my hearing difficulty to the RIs and suggested ways to deal with this but their efforts were shortlived and they quickly reverted back to standing in the middle of the menage shouting advice and instructions.The second reason is that I felt lessons and other activities were designed for younger riders. I was aware that very few older riders booked onto the group lessons and wondered why this was. I acknowledge that a riding centres' clients (main source of income) may be predominantly younger riders but believe that if riding centres catered more for older riders this could be an important and reliable source of income. So am I missing something here? Maybe some forum members who are RIs or are invloved in riding centres could enlighten me about why riding centres don't promote lessons for older riders and undertake disability training.