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ReRider versus the Newfangled!

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  • Original Poster

    #61
    Originally posted by dizzywriter View Post
    What surprised me the most, now that I think about it, is the predominance of women.
    Not just women, but more diverse women. Trainers and riders are suddenly in all shapes and colors!

    In the 80's every female trainer and almost every serious rider I knew was a WASP who came from $$ and was built like a 13 year old boy. They looked great in riding clothes! Me and my chunky, buxom, Jewish body-designed-to-withstand-famine did NOT look like them. Now they're sometimes a bit more zaftig, a lot of them have come up from more normal, middle class backgrounds and I like that a lot.
    ==================
    Somehow my inner ten year old seems to have stolen my chequebook!

    http://reriderandpony.blogspot.com/

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    • #62
      Yes, adult women were around but not as much. Most of them had been in horses forever and were very good riders. Hardly any adult beginners.

      I'm going to add footing. Yes, footing. Back in the day every arena I went to, every local outdoor arena, had the same dirt in the arena as was everywhere else on the property. Indoors were usually a really fine high manure content mix of dirt that gardeners would have paid big money for. The dust would be sifting out of your clothes and hair for the rest of the day.
      Courageous Weenie Eventer Wannabe
      Incredible Invisible

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      • #63
        I'm another one old enough to remember no saddle pad at all. We cleaned tack after everytime we rode.

        I was handling double reins soon after I learned W/T/C--almost all the dinosaurs I rode had double reins. I tried riding again with double reins recently and I was hopeless.

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        • #64
          Try again, I just picked up double reins for the first time since I was twelve and it came back pretty quick....

          I loved my hunter-green coat. My first coat was navy blue and I hated it. Still do hate navy (the ones I just bought are flat black and pinstripe brown.) I was so happy when I had to replace the blue one and I got hunter green.
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          • #65
            Originally posted by LittleblackMorgan View Post

            Trainers no longer tie leathers to the girth to teach the rider to keep her leg in place. Or tie their legs there either. .
            I've had my irons tied to the girth several times this year, and hay twine around my shoulders to emphasize shoulders back. (horrible habit of mine, but that honestly helped, after one lesson with that on, I never wanted to round my shoulders again!) So, I would say that trainers still do this, and this was in lessons for IHSA, taught by my coach who is 20. Tieing my irons to the girth while jumping really helps me with my leg.

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            • #66
              Originally posted by artienallie View Post
              Added hint on this if you have womenly thighs - when you move your leg like this, reach down behind your leg and pull the muscle of your inner thigh back as you put your leg on the horse. It'll allow you to move your leg a bit further into the proper position.
              I don't think it's my muscle that is the problem.

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              • #67
                Originally posted by danceronice View Post
                Try again, I just picked up double reins for the first time since I was twelve and it came back pretty quick....
                I'm not allowed to touch double reins until I get rid of my awful open-handed habit from growing up riding a Paso Fino in a curb bit. (Allowed by ME, that is, PhoenixFarm hasn't expressed an opinion! )
                Originally posted by HuntrJumpr
                No matter what level of showing you're doing, you are required to have pants on.

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                • #68
                  Originally posted by LittleblackMorgan View Post
                  ...sweat scrapers were made in plastic! When I was a kid it was metal and only metal.
                  I can do better than that. The stable I worked at had a carved wooden one. The metal ones cut the hair. The wooden one didn't work too great, but I wish I had it as a collectible.

                  I love the rubber squeegies.

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                  • #69
                    When I was a teenager riding my horses we had: a hard brush, dandy brush, curry comb, sweat scraper(metal) and a hoof pick. That was ALL the grooming stuff. We had show sheen for adding the shine if it was needed. My morgan was pretty shiny to begin we so show sheen wasn't needed.

                    English jumping saddles had a round cantle.

                    Footing..Um..my horses lived in a field that had rocks, boulders, and so on. Never lame once. The ring I would go and pick rocks out of so that if I got dumped off I wouldn't land on one. I also had morgans so that might have accounted for the hardiness.

                    At shows several of the rings that I rode at were made temporairly out of orange construction tape or fence. One ring had such a bad hill on the one side that it was FUN if it had rained.

                    Also at shows I slept in the stall because it was fun. Who needed sleep the first night..you have friends there. The 2nd night everyone crashed.

                    Rubber boots were ok..no one would maim you if you wore them.

                    Half Chaps..my parents had a pair for trail riding and they had velcro on them and were hideous.
                    Insignia MC - Spanish PRE mare
                    Kenny - Hanoverian Gelding
                    Tuggy - RIP at the bridge (9/12/2016)
                    Theodore the Boxer - RIP at the the bridge (10/5/2017)

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                    • #70
                      In my grooming bucket I have a rubber curry, a stiff brush, a soft brush, my rub rag and my hoof pick. I'm not even sure what some of the other brushes in the catalogs are for. (The sweat scraper is in the bath bucket with the sponge.)
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                      • #71
                        Originally posted by danceronice View Post
                        Try again, I just picked up double reins for the first time since I was twelve and it came back pretty quick....
                        You're probably right. Wasn't so much that I felt awkward with the two reins but I'm so used to dressage contact and the snaffle and the pelham--with the light touch required but so much more impact than the snaffle--felt... wierd. Wanted to try it out for future foxhunting and my sensitive mare was

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                        • #72
                          Lol, my gelding was like "Oh, good, this doesn't bend in the middle and poke me!" But he is not a puller/leaner and the curb rein lets me make teeny tiny tweaks to get his attention. I just need to find reins so it matches the flat Crosby bridle I got him off eBay.
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