I hope y'all aren't too bored of tack posts, because I guess I did just do one.
i had it down to 3 for a while!! |
I mean. JenJ and Lindsey and Alyssa were all like "wtf beyotch WHY ARE YOU GIRTH SHOPPING you already have a girth and it's fine".
Which like. Was true. But.
I just had this feeling that Courage would do better in a different girth. So I bought one. It looks almost exactly like the last one, but I like the way it distributes pressure better. Does that matter? Maybe. Maybe not. Maybe I'm over reacting.
OR MAYBE
My sensitive princess horse has recently gotten rubs from his Back on Track saddle pad (fine in winter, not in shedding season), his CWD breastcollar (really can't explain, but if bozo didn't have to go in a martingale, he wouldn't have to wear this), and then from his most favorite princess bit because eff you logic, apparently.
So.
We got a new girth. We eliminated the martingale. We changed saddle pads.
so minimalist |
I switched him back to his beloved Sprenger on his Red Barn bridle, but that's a crank noseband (so no standing martingale) and we have to eliminate the running because rubs. Dammit.
Unfortunately, if you know anything about riding Courage in the spring, you know that it becomes a martingale-or-die situation, so then we switched to our jump bridle with it's knock off sprenger. It's less desirable, but accommodates a standing martingale and I attempted to borrow a running without a breastcollar so that we could MAYBE not get rubs.
Then I threw him on the lunge line with his standing on his jump bridle. And watched him completely freak the hell out because you know. Horse. Spring. Life. Whatever. An interesting thing happened--Courage would try to blow sideways, fling his head up, hit the standing martingale, and go back to horsing properly.
a standing to lunge #logic |
But that still leaves us with a bit problem. You see, I really love the sprenger for when he's working correctly because it gives me the right amount of sensitivity with him. HOWEVER, because he is very sensitive and because I'm working VERY hard to convince him that contact is good, we go in his super fat princess bit 2-4 days a week. That lets him just rest into a very safe contact.
fattest. bit. ever. |
the mean, mean sprenger |
no joint touches the pony face |
So we did that. Courage flipped his shit on the lunge line (it's our new thing), but it never got too out of hand because of the standing. Then I got on and was able to work quietly with him and talk him into resting in the contact, which was now safe because it was still the same hugely fat mouthpiece that princesses need.
It was a very thoughtful, interesting ride, but the net result was two of the best trot circles I've ever done on this horse.
you heard me |
Maybe.
On this horse though, I have my very serious doubts.
but hey. he looks like this. |
I've always wanted to use bit guards. (I don't know why. Okay. They just fascinate me and make me feel badass.) But my horse has never had a rub, so no need. BUT YOU HAVE A NEED
ReplyDeleteHaha but putting bit guards on an eggbutt is just kind of sad. And makes me look like I don't know what bit guards are for. And then I'd have to buy the bit in a larger size so the guards fit. ;-)
DeleteMaybe just buy in the larger size and it'll take care of the rubbing?
DeleteWork that tack collection, my friend. WORK IT.
ReplyDeleteYou can never have enough bits. Buy them all. ALL. In every size imaginable.
ReplyDeleteGotta love princess horses. Mine has justified a lot of purchases, but he keeps racking up vet bills which limits my tack spending...
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure you could justify buying anything. Teach me your ways so I can work this voodoo magic on Hubby.
ReplyDeleteDepending on the item, I either explain how it was such a good deal that I'd be stupid not to buy it (eg $85 for $300 tall boots or $60 for $250 breeches) or just keep talking until his eyes glaze over. Whichever works.
DeleteAnd he doesn't question the $10 stuff because he has hobbies too, albeit much cheaper ones than mine.
I used this logic to buy $300 tall boots for $90. They actually mostly fit too so...
DeleteAND FITS breeches for $50.....oops
DeleteMy BOT track pad rubbed Mikey too- it prompted me to put my half pad back under the saddle pad (since I couldn't use it against his back anyway). Glad you have a whole arsenal of bits and things!
ReplyDeleteHa! Such thoroughbred. It's currently rubbing along the binding at the bottom of the pad, so changing the half pad would do nothing but wreck a nice mattes. We're magic.
DeleteAh! The shape of the BOT pad did not match Mikey's spine well enough. It rubbed his whithers within a week. And I switched from the expensive Mattes pads to synthetic fleece... I had to, to keep the half pad properly clean I have to wash it every week, and the Mattes pad did not hold up to that abuse!
Deleteand the collection grows :D
ReplyDeleteOh god, does this mean I need to try a fulmer on my horse who also Does Not Do loose rings?
ReplyDeleteI didn't think he'd do the fulmer either, but so far it's bloody magic.
DeleteYou sound like me! Trying to convince the BF "Yes, I bought this bit. It might not work now, but future horses might use it, so we're buying it now. Thanks."
ReplyDeleteHey, whatever works! If there's any horse who needs a collection of tack to choose from every day...it's your horse! Haha!
ReplyDeleteOoh, I've always wanted to try a fulmer bit just because! And I don't think I could ever get tired of tack posts.
ReplyDeletePrincess ponies need a full closet of options :)
ReplyDeleteBetween you and my BFF, ya'll have got EVERYTHING. Next time she needs a bit change, I'm sending her to you.
ReplyDeleteAlways a good reason to keep tack hoing
ReplyDelete