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What is worse? - Updated w/ pic below:

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  • #21
    Originally posted by meaty ogre View Post
    I still think I'm too big by a good stretch, but she went so much better after the tune-up. It's hard enough learning to ride without having to deal with barn sourness. I'm still going to long-line and work on the ponying, but as others said, sometimes it's just easier to hop on and fix it.
    too big ?????????????
    h.e.l.l. no...kick and go and ride all the stinky hair of that thing...

    don't feel sorry,don't look back, grab it and growl

    Tamara in TN
    Production Acres,Pro A Welsh Cobs
    I am one of the last 210,000 remaining full time farmers in America.We feed the others.

    Comment

    • Original Poster

      #22
      Ha ha! I didn't even have to! Pony is very opposed to "hard" work, so she had it all figured out by the 2nd lap I did make her keep at it though...we can both use the exercise.

      Comment


      • #23
        LOL, ponies are smart.
        Evil genuis smart.

        Looked at the photo, you're not too big for the pony.

        Pony is adorable.

        And I'm still giggling over her "gravitate towards the barn" thing. It always makes me laugh watching the learning to steer kids ride the wise-ass ponies and seeing the ponies slowly drift right out of the ring gate and back into the barn before the little jockey notices what's going on.

        BTW, have I ever mentioned I love your screen name? makes me grin every time I see it.
        You jump in the saddle,
        Hold onto the bridle!
        Jump in the line!
        ...Belefonte

        Comment


        • #24
          ok I'll probably regret telling this but here goes:

          back in a wonderfully misspent youth I rode horses for a major horse trader...think 100 plus a week...our job: make them right or back to the killers they go...see ya bye bye

          one of the sneakiest tricks was being barn sour and one time we got a doozy of a mare for it...she'd go 300 feet down the track, duck hard left, drop the rider and head back to the stall....dead run

          well Boss watched me fight the old heifer one afternoon all the way back and said,"take her out with them (pointed to some other riders) and when she starts her crap, don't fight her just hold on"

          "ok" says me

          we go on out and I ride like an Ohio tourist ....she spins and dives and runs back just where we knew she would...on her dead run back to the barn she has to come round a blind curve.There is my boss dead center with a 8 foot bull whip and cracks hard as the devil across her chest and twice more on her butt before she spins around and runs back for the group as hard as we left it....

          all this with me aboard I ride her on the rest of the way and when we return as a group I'm furious and say "you could have killed me!!!!!!!!!" says he" "yeah,but I didn't" and walks off...
          good times those :>

          Tamara in TN
          Production Acres,Pro A Welsh Cobs
          I am one of the last 210,000 remaining full time farmers in America.We feed the others.

          Comment


          • #25
            I'm another who loves the screen name!

            Looked at the pic, and the expression on that pony's face is priceless. She KNOWS the jig is up, and she is not one bit happy about it either!

            Comment


            • #26
              Tamara...I'm snorting like hell over here!

              I can soooo picture that, because that's so exactly what the barn owner would've done to us riders when I was a kid too!

              And I had the same job...truckload of auction horses and ponies coming in and us kids had to sort them, ride them and get them ready for a public trail riding string in a couple short months. And them during trail riding season they still got schooled for the fall local shows. And many were sold at the late fall shows and the money used over the winter to purchase the next few truckloads. Boy did you learn fast why so many nice looking animals were at the auction!

              But we were young and stupid and just happy to ride! Gotta say I can 100% attribute my velcro-arse to that psycho barn owner and all those horses! (his famous words were "walk it off" if you weren't bleeding too hard and "guess you can clean tack today" if you were! )

              Mara, I saw that cheesed off expression on Meaty's pony too...made me grin!
              You jump in the saddle,
              Hold onto the bridle!
              Jump in the line!
              ...Belefonte

              Comment


              • #27
                Originally posted by MistyBlue View Post
                But we were young and stupid and just happy to ride! Gotta say I can 100% attribute my velcro-arse to that psycho barn owner and all those horses! (his famous words were "walk it off" if you weren't bleeding too hard and "guess you can clean tack today" if you were! )
                one of Boss's "if you can't ride, don't bother to come in,I ain't paying cripples too lay around look stupid"

                I get blasted sometimes for being harsh.... the girly girls ain't never heard my best stuff....logged in my mind a long time ago by a feller who looked JUST like Hank Jr. on the "Whiskey Bent and @#!*% Bound "Album cover

                Tamara in TN
                Production Acres,Pro A Welsh Cobs
                I am one of the last 210,000 remaining full time farmers in America.We feed the others.

                Comment


                • #28
                  We had two horses at the barn when I was a kid named that...Whiskey Bent and H*ll Bound. Nobody much liked riding either one...both were scrapers. Scraped us off on trees if we weren't paying attention. Both sold fast though, fancy colors!

                  Our barn owner would tell me, "It's not my problem that you can't get the saddles on the tall horses! No tacking up, no riding later!"
                  Guess who learned how to drop a saddle on a horse through a hay chute?
                  You jump in the saddle,
                  Hold onto the bridle!
                  Jump in the line!
                  ...Belefonte

                  Comment


                  • #29
                    Oh, heavens, MO, you're absolutely fine! That pony is 100% okay with you. Heck, take her over a few jumps, she can handle it!

                    This is a friend of mine on a wee pony. Friend is about my height, so around 5'6", and average weight. Never sticked pony, but she's wee, so 12.2-13hh, maybe?? As you can see, they did just fine: http://i52.tinypic.com/2u5ysjq.jpg

                    I still want to send that picture in to GM .
                    Against My Better Judgement: A blog about my new FLF OTTB
                    Do not buy a Volkswagen. I did and I regret it.
                    VW sucks.

                    Comment


                    • #30
                      Originally posted by meaty ogre View Post
                      I prefer anonymity, but the pic is so bad you couldn't ID me in a 2 person line-up, so here it is:
                      http://i1093.photobucket.com/albums/...d/RSCN0825.jpg

                      It didn't feel nearly as bad as I thought. The worst part was that my calves touch, but not my feet/heels so I had to really turn my toes out lift my thigh a little to kick her. She did not seem to have any trouble carrying my weight, and she never even broke a sweat.
                      You're not too big AT ALL! Good luck!

                      Comment


                      • #31
                        I am right there with you, riding a medium pony who started out out of shape and very fat and stubborn. We are getting in shape together. Ponies are so fun. I love them, wish I was 12 again!!!!

                        You look just fine on that pony and I bet you will have a blast too. Do put your stirrups up a bit and use a longer whip to tap her behind your leg if its still an issue, works well with my pony since my legs don't fit quite right either. Update with some progress pics!

                        Comment

                        • Original Poster

                          #32
                          Tamara that story is hilarious. I bet if anyone tried that with you today though they'd be extracting a bull whip from their nether-regions!

                          Amastrike, I love how you can see your friend's entire foot on the off-side under the pony's belly!

                          My niece was impressed with how much easier stinker-pony rode after the quick tune-up, so now pony will be getting at least weekly rides by me. It's easy enough because my niece uses my saddle anyway until we can get her a more suitable one, so I'll just hop on first and confirm to pony that we are going to be a good listener.

                          It was funny how quickly she went from, "I don't wanna..." to "Yes ma'am, right away ma'am!" And you all are right, I do think she actually started to pout when I got on! I did chuckle a little the first time my niece asked her to halt and she stopped so quick my niece almost ate mane!

                          She really is a good little pony (in her defense we were riding in an unfenced ring in poor lighting and high winds) but I could just see things getting a little worse and worse each time. Left unchecked I'm sure she could get to be a stinker.

                          Comment


                          • #33
                            Tam if I didn't know you weren't in Texas I swear we rode for the same BO. Though my BO was my dad and he was raised doing the same thing. Now DD is not allowed near anything that is not completely kid safe she's not nearly bold enough to survive pony broncing on a regular basis. I made the mistake of telling her about the frame overo welsh cross pony that would and could not only flip over backwards but could side pass at a full canter with his nose in the air(Did I mention grooming him looked more like a boxing match than a loving task?). That little SOB (Yes that was his name BTW) made a perfect eventing pony once he finally found his boy. SOB for the rest of us but his boy could get that pony to go through fire for him. Never did settle for grooming completely and had to be twitched for feet. After that story she didn't ride for a couple of weeks scared to death her nice safe pony might try that with her. (DD now gets only nice wonderful tales of brilliant ponies who always mind.)
                            Adoring fan of A Fine Romance
                            Originally Posted by alicen:
                            What serious breeder would think that a horse at that performance level is push button? Even so, that's still a lot of buttons to push.

                            Comment


                            • #34
                              Just chiming in to add you definitely do not look too big for what you want to do with her in that picture. Glad you had a good tune-up session.

                              Tamara, I've ridden with folks like that, but I have to ask...did the bull whip incident cure the barn sourness?
                              exploring the relationship between horse and human

                              Comment


                              • #35
                                [QUOTE=CosMonster;5266236]Just chiming in to add you definitely do not look too big for what you want to do with her in that picture. Glad you had a good tune-up session.

                                Tamara, I've ridden with folks like that, but I have to ask...did the bull whip incident cure the barn sourness? [/QUOTE

                                she stayed the rest of that summer and made not ONE (even sideways) glance back to the "safety" of the barn

                                Tamara in TN
                                Production Acres,Pro A Welsh Cobs
                                I am one of the last 210,000 remaining full time farmers in America.We feed the others.

                                Comment


                                • #36
                                  Originally posted by Mara View Post
                                  I'm another who loves the screen name!

                                  Looked at the pic, and the expression on that pony's face is priceless. She KNOWS the jig is up, and she is not one bit happy about it either!

                                  Agreed. That pony's thought bubble definitely has "OH crap" written in it.

                                  Comment


                                  • #37
                                    Originally posted by Tamara in TN View Post
                                    she stayed the rest of that summer and made not ONE (even sideways) glance back to the "safety" of the barn

                                    Tamara in TN
                                    I wonder sometimes why this kind of take-no-crap training is so uncommon. I'm only 23 but my first trainer was this way, and I guess instilled in me the basic principle of give an inch, they'll take a mile. So it seems natural to me.

                                    When I visit someone's barn (usually much older than me) and they have to bust out the grain bucket to catch horses, it makes me WTF a little. My horse ran away from me in turnout exactly once. I swooped up a longewhip and chased that sucker until he realized the error of his ways...lmao. Incredibly, after that, he always came up to me to be haltered...

                                    I consider barn-sour-ness, difficulty catching, not standing still for mounting, etc. as serious faults in horse manners, and I don't tolerate them. Just baffled that so many do.

                                    Comment


                                    • #38
                                      By far my favorite "read" on COTH today. I love my ponies, but they are so very clever. (understatement)
                                      Loved the pony looking none too pleased that she was going to have to "work".
                                      I'm 5'5", and let's just say solid of stature (hahaha my spouse just asked me if I weighted 130? - well, no, add 15 lbs) -- I digress -- All the things that you can do to educate the pony will be beneficial, and of course, you are not over-sized for her. I ride our green 5 yr old 13.1 hh welsh cob - who is also ..quite solid. Love that about ponies! But unless you have a talented, small kid around, well, someone has to ride them other than w/t riders. I have a great older aqha gelding that I can pony off of - and the ponies would probably rather have me ride them, than endure gelding's very definite "I'm not taking any crap off of you" attitude.

                                      Comment


                                      • #39
                                        Originally posted by amastrike View Post
                                        Oh, heavens, MO, you're absolutely fine! That pony is 100% okay with you. Heck, take her over a few jumps, she can handle it!

                                        This is a friend of mine on a wee pony. Friend is about my height, so around 5'6", and average weight. Never sticked pony, but she's wee, so 12.2-13hh, maybe?? As you can see, they did just fine: http://i52.tinypic.com/2u5ysjq.jpg

                                        I still want to send that picture in to GM .
                                        Yay! As another 5'6" rider on another 12.2 and change pony, what size saddle is she using? I'm still looking for one, but concerned that what fits me will be too long for him. I have tracings but can't ship trial saddles back and forth.
                                        HAS provides hospital care to 340,000 people in Haiti's Artibonite Valley 24/7/365/earthquake/cholera/whatever.
                                        www.hashaiti.org blog:http://hashaiti.org/blog

                                        Comment


                                        • #40
                                          Originally posted by amastrike View Post
                                          I still want to send that picture in to GM .
                                          What George wouldn't be able to say...

                                          "I can't see what her leg is doing on the off side, but I would suspect..."

                                          Meaty O, you're just fine on the pone pone.

                                          And he's adorable!!!
                                          "Aye God, Woodrow..."

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