Big Ben
Well-Known Member
This question was prompted in part by this thread
http://www.horseandhound.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=585199
And this question asked there
and also by my own thread
http://www.horseandhound.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=585036
and this point
Now what I know about Spanish horses can be written in large capitals, on the back of a very small postage stamp, with room to spare, but I do I think remember the commentators on the Olympic dressage saying that the Spanish horses were great at collection, and usually had a good passage and piaffe, because they find elevation easy, but they struggle with extension.
My saddlebred crosses are kind of the opposite, they should be great at extension and covering ground, but trying to gather them up and collect and get off the ground is more of a battle.
So how much should you choose the right animal for what you are wanting to do, and how much can we mould, transform and change their natural strengths, to perform the disciplines we choose for them?
Not in anyway being 'off' here, just wondering what people think.
http://www.horseandhound.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=585199
And this question asked there
I see that you are trying to "reduce his exaggerated Spanish paces", now why would you want to be doing that? Those ARE his paces, and trying to change him into something non-Spanish will simply not work and may very well make him miserable.
and also by my own thread
http://www.horseandhound.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=585036
and this point
I know that there are those who love it, those who hate it, having read both sides of the argument I am thinking it may be a useful aid to own, to help my saddlebred cross horses get more comfortable with long and low as an idea. I don't know if they are all like it, but I believe that there was a particularly spooky giraffe bred into the mix at one time, which means that head up and body inverted is their default setting.
Now what I know about Spanish horses can be written in large capitals, on the back of a very small postage stamp, with room to spare, but I do I think remember the commentators on the Olympic dressage saying that the Spanish horses were great at collection, and usually had a good passage and piaffe, because they find elevation easy, but they struggle with extension.
My saddlebred crosses are kind of the opposite, they should be great at extension and covering ground, but trying to gather them up and collect and get off the ground is more of a battle.
So how much should you choose the right animal for what you are wanting to do, and how much can we mould, transform and change their natural strengths, to perform the disciplines we choose for them?
Not in anyway being 'off' here, just wondering what people think.