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< Farrier checking in. That is all. Feel free to bounce shoeing/trim questions off me, I don't make expert money but after a decade I've seen enough terrible poo poo to know some things.
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 01:14 |
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# ? Jun 13, 2024 06:10 |
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My horse LOVES getting his feet done, it's almost at a creepy level. He's always been a more people oriented horse than a horse oriented horse but his love for anyone who deals with his feet is extreme and undying.
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 03:49 |
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Why do dogs think that hoof shavings ate the best things ever?
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# ? Jul 31, 2015 09:11 |
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Cause they smell good and have that perfect texture. One time while shoeing a horse in a clients driveway with her dog barking at us (for the sweet sweet nector of the gods, aka hoof) I trained the dog to sit, lay down, and shake. Right in front of the owner. In a matter of 20 minutes. She couldn't believe it. P.S. Dogs can't really digest it all that well, hence why anything smaller than a shepherd will probably vomit it up right when they get inside a house or car.
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# ? Aug 1, 2015 06:14 |
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i was At The Lake last weekend and there was a horse chillin in the water. welp that's my story
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# ? Aug 4, 2015 11:28 |
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Watching the Royal Dublin Horse Show and an Irish pair, Bertram Allen (20) on Romanov (17) get two clears in the team showjumping, makes my heart go all fuzzy to see the golden oldies do so well Look at this gorgeous guy!!
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# ? Aug 7, 2015 17:12 |
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My family has two horses, both old creaky quarterhorses in their early 20s. No one rides in my family anymore, so they're basically just big pets. Very big pets. Both of them spoiled rotten, spending their days out in the sun munching on hay and basking the aches in their bones away.
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# ? Aug 11, 2015 16:23 |
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Going to look at another horse to loan this weekend. Hope it goes better than the last one. He's called Eddie and is 20 years old.
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# ? Aug 14, 2015 13:11 |
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Here's Eddie. He seems nice, going to try him out for a month - have him for two days a week. He lives out in summer, but comes in overnight in winter.
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# ? Aug 16, 2015 18:07 |
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He is flipping gorgeous
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# ? Aug 16, 2015 19:18 |
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Eddie's super handsome. What's he like to ride compared to Tinker?
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# ? Aug 16, 2015 21:41 |
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Very responsive - seems to be more on voice rather than leg aides. Only gave him a quick canter and trot around the ring, but he's nice - quite bouncy gaits, but not difficult to ride if you see what I mean. He's also really good about picking up his feet for hoof cleaning.
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# ? Aug 17, 2015 00:03 |
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Fellow horse addict checking in. I've been riding dressage for about 6 years now. In the past year I've been to both the Spanish Riding School and the FEI World Cup in Vegas. This is Mia. She is a 6 year old Andalusian/QH cross. She has a tiny bit of Thoroughbred in her. She's opinionated but never spooky or stupid. I've had her for 2.5 years. Picture from when I first bought her, almost 4 years old Head shot from our last show Not amused
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# ? Aug 19, 2015 18:30 |
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Got a bit of that thoroughderp in the lines, but not in the attitude.
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# ? Aug 19, 2015 22:28 |
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That is one beautiful horse - her fur looks like velvet.
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# ? Aug 20, 2015 01:18 |
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Eddie got kicked by his field - mate.
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# ? Aug 20, 2015 09:52 |
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Mia is also an absolute stunner. She should wear her shark every day :3 Poor Eddie
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# ? Aug 20, 2015 10:52 |
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teenytinymouse posted:Mia is also an absolute stunner. She should wear her shark every day :3 Yes, Mia should wear her shark every day. And yes - it looks bad - not too deep, but it's on a rear leg and has really swollen up. I hope he'll be okay, poor boy.
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# ? Aug 20, 2015 19:43 |
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Angrymog posted:Eddie got kicked by his field - mate. My horse got kicked in the rear end by another horse and he had a perfect hoof print on his butt with half of a hoof on each cheek I'm sure he deserved it, he's the most socially awkward horse ever. It's adorable in a dorky way but sometimes he gets beaten up since he doesn't understand other horses' social cues.
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# ? Aug 22, 2015 17:07 |
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Ed had been bitten on the bum a couple of times, but this was a nasty kick to the leg. He's not lame, but it's not good. From the sound of it he got beaten up by another field-mate and that damaged his confidence when dealing with other horses
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# ? Aug 22, 2015 20:01 |
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Eddie Update He's moving to another yard which is closer to me. Not ridable atm, but I'm going to see him on Wedsnesday to look around the new yard and give him a groom.
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# ? Aug 24, 2015 23:52 |
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I rode for the first time today after two months of being in and out of hospital, and holy crap, it's hard to give / avoid giving leg aids, when your legs have been left to turn to jelly :{
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# ? Sep 1, 2015 19:25 |
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Gotta love when you're almost done for the day but that last horse just wants to run around his stall in circles so you get a nice dust shower.
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# ? Sep 3, 2015 01:11 |
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Ugh, this thread is the best. I used to ride horses from 13 to 20. No lessons, just throw a saddle on one and try not to fall off while flying around the trails. We were blessed to live next to hundreds of acres of public land and a lake, plus a couple hundred acres of woods on the farm. I really miss flying around on those trails, dodging briars and spider webs, having cedar trees shed alllllll over me, then hauling rear end through a corn field or around the lake when the water was down. Swimming the horses in the summer and trying not to get shot at by hunters during turkey and deer season. Yeah, we wore hella bright shirts and still had hunters staring at us. Sometimes the lake would flood up almost to the road and we'd take long, slow rides with the water brushing our stirrups. That was the day that I learned horses find a bunch of fish splashing around their legs to be signs of the apocalypse. Best part of riding in the woods is when you turn a corner and a bunch of turkeys explode out of the bushes and your horse decides that the best course of action is galloping wildly off into the sunset. I got very, very good at grabbing mane and dodging tree trunks that wanted to take out my knees. Also four wheelers are apparently horse-eating death machines. We were totally lucky our horses were decent sorts and didn't just buck us off and vanish. Even the most notorious horse for throwing people would stop and wait for us to remount. My horse was a crabby old Quarterhorse who would get righteously pissed if the horses in front of him moved too slow...more than once he tried to bite them on the rear end. It took 3 people to bridle him when I got him but after a ton of work and carrots he'd practically shove his head into the bridle and he would try to hold his temper on the trail if I was on him. Anyone else riding him was poo poo out of luck, he didn't give a gently caress since he knew no carrots were coming. Yes, I bribed the hell out of my horse but it saved me and him a ton of grief and probably me a few concussions. I wish I could ride again but just thinking about some of the poo poo we did back then makes me cringe. Taking lessons would be fun if I wasn't so broke. Please keep posting so I can live vicariously through you all :P
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# ? Sep 8, 2015 04:16 |
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Eddie's still not healed, and his owner keeps posting borderline Britain First stuff on Facebook, which is making things a bit a awkward. I think if she posts an actual Britain First or EDL (English Defence League) link I'll tell her that the deal's off Anyway, for the past few weeks at the riding school I've been on Millie*,** who is the archetypical Riding School Old Mare - she hates you and will expend more energy trying to short cut maneuvers than if she'd just done the loving circle in the first place. I'm starting to get on with her, but she's an old lady (20 or so) and a bit set in her ways. At the end of last lesson, the instructor swopped us over*** - me on to Tinker and his rider on to Mille. It was interesting how much more comfortable I felt riding him, and was able to put him over a jump with no hesitation; Instructor said that that was due to the work I'd done with him prior to being swopped on to Millie. So I guess it's nice to see that practice does actually pay off. * Picture to come **I think that this may be because I share my lesson with one of the staff who also does the booking and she's writing Tinker in for herself. *** I think this is something that she's been wanting to do for a while, but this was the first lesson in ages that only had school horses in; there'd been private ones in as well all summer
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# ? Sep 8, 2015 07:39 |
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Another good lesson today - a bit of more technical jumping - worked up to three jumps riding via a serpentine lengthways up and down the school. Was on Tinker the Floofy. His mane was braided because he'd been given a hair cut, and it had gone a bit punk and apparently he's not supposed to be punk. Boo I say. Anarchy in Udimore! Rock the menage! Next time we do a jumping lesson we're going to be really brave and try with fillers in because that's were my jumping with Tinker started to go wrong.
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# ? Sep 10, 2015 19:52 |
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Dunno if I should put this here or in Big Dogs ( he's a bit of both), but have a happy video of a happy disabled donkey. https://youtu.be/JNa-8S6zzSo Don Quixote loves new shavings!
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# ? Sep 11, 2015 13:25 |
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Suspect Bucket posted:Dunno if I should put this here or in Big Dogs ( he's a bit of both), but have a happy video of a happy disabled donkey. That is a happyy donkey. What's his story?
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# ? Sep 11, 2015 19:05 |
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I'm getting to ride Murphy again. My horsie-bro
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# ? Sep 17, 2015 18:02 |
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That donkey's flexural limb deformity upsets me.
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# ? Sep 19, 2015 04:38 |
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A better shot of Murphy than the one I posted way back when. He's muddy because he got brought in just before being tacked up. It was nice to ride him again, but the lesson wasn't much fun really. My usual instructor was ill, and this was a suprise technical lesson about making the horse move in an outline - making them hold their head and move more like dressage horses.
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# ? Sep 19, 2015 12:54 |
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Angrymog posted:It was nice to ride him again, but the lesson wasn't much fun really. My usual instructor was ill, and this was a suprise technical lesson about making the horse move in an outline - making them hold their head and move more like dressage horses. It's not fun, but it all comes together in the end, right? ^^; I see lots of people buying all kinds of scary-looking bits, or gimmicky products that clip onto the bridle, to try and keep the horse's head down, when the only real problem they have is that they've just never been taught how to ride with light hands, while containing the horse's energy underneath them. The fact that they mix this stuff in with the jumping is probably a sign of a good riding school. In fact, if they have horses that can move in a proper outline, that's probably an even better indicator
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# ? Sep 19, 2015 13:15 |
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Tyma posted:It's not fun, but it all comes together in the end, right? ^^; quote:The fact that they mix this stuff in with the jumping is probably a sign of a good riding school. In fact, if they have horses that can move in a proper outline, that's probably an even better indicator
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# ? Sep 19, 2015 13:28 |
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Angrymog posted:It did a bit, but I'm bad at learning physical stuff, so it's the sort of thing that I'd need to do a lot to get down pat. Almost all lesson was at trot and without stirrups which was an additional challenge. I think it's the sort of thing I'd like to book a solo lesson to try and learn properly. I find group lessons are actually better for picking up that sort of stuff. In a solo lesson, you're constantly under instruction, and focusing on performing something specific, wheras a group lesson gives you a fair bit of breathing space when the attention isn't on you anymore, and you can just chill out... Or work really loving hard on your fundamentals! I find that if I just jump on a horse and all eyes are on me, I start to alternate between focusing on all of the little things : Proper seat? Rein tension? Heels down? Neck straight? Consistent Strides? Which leg is currently raised? When I'm under pressure like that I'll start to second-guess things like my diagonals, which I should trust myself enough get right the first time, and instead of multi-tasking, my brain will just flip through these things one by one, causing me to focus on something, and then immediately neglect it, as I focus my full attention to checking something else. In an average group lesson in the UK, there's a good degree of downtime, where someone else is performing a manoeuvre, nobody's looking at me, and I can take the time to compose myself, and work on my fundamentals for a lap or two of the school. I just turn everything off, close my eyes, and start to feel the footfalls, or go into sitting trot, and straighten up my seat. I find that when it's then time for me to take the lead, or perform a manoeuvre, I can turn everything else back on, and ride with a lot more confidence and composure. I think of a group lesson as half an hour of being mentored by the instructor, and half an hour extra to just ride around in a rectangle, and practice something fundamental the instructor has indicated I should be improving. I much prefer that to an intense half-hour lesson, where I'm constantly under pressure to improve my faults as quickly as possible.
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# ? Sep 19, 2015 15:26 |
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Tyma posted:In an average group lesson in the UK, there's a good degree of downtime, where someone else is performing a manoeuvre, nobody's looking at me, and I can take the time to compose myself, and work on my fundamentals for a lap or two of the school. I just turn everything off, close my eyes, and start to feel the footfalls, or go into sitting trot, and straighten up my seat. I find that when it's then time for me to take the lead, or perform a manoeuvre, I can turn everything else back on, and ride with a lot more confidence and composure. Also their arena is absolutely huge compared to other school arenas I've been in.
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# ? Sep 19, 2015 15:36 |
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Have anyone ever ridden in a US-style lesson? They're um.. terrifying :{
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# ? Sep 19, 2015 15:37 |
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Trotting without stirrups is good for you, that's why it hurts so much I had a bad habit of gripping up so I had to do a lot of work without stirrups. Think of having big weights attached to your heels and put a hand on the saddle when you need to and keep yourself stuck on the saddle, it's not fun for anybody if you're bouncing the whole time. Murphy is a gorgeous big guy, he has a sassy face! Tyma posted:It's not fun, but it all comes together in the end, right? ^^; Edit: I left the reply window open a long time there! I agree with you Tyma about group lessons, I like having downtime between turns to settle myself and think about what I'm doing. What are US style lessons like? teenytinymouse fucked around with this message at 15:42 on Sep 19, 2015 |
# ? Sep 19, 2015 15:38 |
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teenytinymouse posted:Think of having big weights attached to your heels and put a hand on the saddle when you need to and keep yourself stuck on the saddle, it's not fun for anybody if you're bouncing the whole time. Hello, fellow 'Huge Imaginary Weights' user! Our instructor used to pull out £20 notes, put them in the seat of the saddle, and wager that we couldn't keep the money sitting there, while performing an ever-more-ellaborate set of manoeuvres. I've never seen anyone win the money :{ quote:What are US style lessons like? The only one I've ever been in was English Riding, but also kind of like circuit training. Everyone was assigned a corner, half or route around the school, and had 20 minutes to ride around and work on a specific fault or manoeuvre, by repeating it over and over again. The instructor was on horseback, and rode around the school observing the riders and pointing out faults, while her understudies all watched from the gallery.
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# ? Sep 19, 2015 15:53 |
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Tyma posted:The only one I've ever been in was English Riding, but also kind of like circuit training. Everyone was assigned a corner, half or route around the school, and had 20 minutes to ride around and work on a specific fault or manoeuvre, by repeating it over and over again. The instructor was on horseback, and rode around the school observing the riders and pointing out faults, while her understudies all watched from the gallery. re: without stirrups, I don't mind it, and I was quite pleased that I could do the whole lesson without getting a stich, again not something I was able to do a couple of months back.
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# ? Sep 19, 2015 16:05 |
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# ? Jun 13, 2024 06:10 |
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Tyma posted:Hello, fellow 'Huge Imaginary Weights' user! That's a good one! My instructor was always one for imaginary aids, carrying imaginary trays to keep your hands up, having an imaginary pole behind your back to keep your elbows at your sides, imagine you have squeezy sponges in your hands to keep from having too hard a contact etc. I don't think I ever saw her use a real aid for position, she brought out this weird back brace thing that meant you couldn't move your upper arms from your sides but it was purely used as a threat. Which worked very well! quote:The only one I've ever been in was English Riding, but also kind of like circuit training. Everyone was assigned a corner, half or route around the school, and had 20 minutes to ride around and work on a specific fault or manoeuvre, by repeating it over and over again. The instructor was on horseback, and rode around the school observing the riders and pointing out faults, while her understudies all watched from the gallery.
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# ? Sep 19, 2015 16:14 |