Lauren and I are taking advantage of both being at the same
barn and getting some extra ride time in. She’s riding Paddykins for me when I
can’t get out and she has time, and I got to ride Simon for her last night. Let
me just say it’s so AWESOME to ride an actual trained horse! I mean, I love
Paddy, but Simon has all these buttons and this lovely, steady way of going and
he’s just so much fun to ride!
Simon-selfie
If you’ve been following Lauren’s blog, you’ll know she’s worried
about Simon’s mysterious hind-end weirdness, where he takes an off step every
now and again. We’ve talked about it a lot, and she asked me to tell her what I
felt when I sat on him.
First, and most importantly, Simon doesn’t seem to be in any
pain. He was super happy to get out and work, very cooperative and tried really
hard for me. I swear I’m going to turn him into a dressage pony!
One thing I noticed right off the bat was that my right hip
was being moved around a lot more than my left, even at the walk. This is
consistent with the vet’s report that he picks his right hip up higher than the
left. You can actually see this if you watch the top of Simon’s butt as he
moves away from you. Simon’s right hock is the one that’s in the process of
fusing, so it’s possible that he’s trying to compensate for the lack of range
of motion in the hock with more motion in his hip. Kind of like if your knee
didn’t bend, you’d have to pick your leg up from your hip.
Simon is quite stiff laterally, meaning that he doesn’t bend
much in his body or neck - especially to the left. Horses are generally more
stiff on the side opposite from the side they won’t bend, and this makes sense
if Simon is compensating more with the right side of his body and is therefore
less flexible on that side. However, when I insisted that he bend, he tried
really hard and gave me some super nice soft moments – what a good boy!
I pushed him a little to see what might help him (or make
him worse), asking for a little shoulder fore, some leg yield (without losing
the shoulders, thank-you-very-much!), and some spiral-in-spiral-out on the
circle. I asked for a lot of forward and a lot of inside leg action, even just
on the straightaways and in the corners. In our first trot circle, on a
long-ish rein with no forward, he mis-stepped behind three times. However, the
more I asked for, the less of a problem he had – he only mis-stepped five more
times in my entire ride, and always in places where the footing was a bit
deep/churned up. It was always the right hind that took the funny step, and it
happened mostly tracking right. It was also very, very subtle – more like a “whoops,
I forgot that foot!” than an actual lame step. My guess (and I’m no vet) is
that he occasionally has a bit of trouble compensating for the loss of motion
in the hock, which results in a very subtle funny step that’s hard to see from
the ground but can be felt from the saddle. The more he’s asked to engage, the
less of a problem it is.
Not yesterday - yesterday was even better! Photo shamelessly stolen from Lauren when I got to play dressage with Simon once before.
Obviously, the solution is for Lauren to start riding
dressage on her lovely dressage horse. Wink-wink-nudge-nudge. ;)
Too fun to be at a barn together!
ReplyDeleteIt is! If only our actual barn time overlapped more.
DeleteDressage for the win!
ReplyDeleteSimon looks like a lot of fun to ride.
He is a lot of fun to ride! and yes, playing in the sandbox is the best. ;)
DeleteObviously! Dressage is the best, anyway. I can't believe she hasn't made the switch yet. ;)
ReplyDeleteAusten, you and I think alike. ;)
DeleteIt is SO valuable to be able to have another rider hop on and compare notes!!
ReplyDeleteIt really can be!
DeleteTeehee - lovely subliminal messaging at the end there Jenj ;-)
ReplyDeleteHmmm... maybe I should try for less subliminal, what do you think? ;)
Delete*shrug*
DeleteIt can never hurt to be MOAR obvious ;-)
Yay for dressage helping all things
ReplyDeleteIt truly does!
DeleteFun riding with/for blog buddies! Simon sounds so cool :)
ReplyDeleteSimon IS pretty awesome! :)
DeleteSimon sounds like so much fun!
ReplyDeleteGlad you have a riding buddy.
Yes, I'm lucky to be able to ride him!
DeleteI seriously feel like super correct dressage is the cure for all lameness. There I said it.
ReplyDelete*Nods sagely*. Yes, Alicia, I believe you are correct. ;)
DeleteHe looks so cute dressage! Yes, make him a dressage pony! lol.
ReplyDeleteI'm trying, lol!
DeleteAdorable! What a hunk.
ReplyDeleteAnd welcome to the club of people who annoy riders of other disciplines by insisting that dressage makes everything better ;)
BWAHAHAHA! We'll get Lauren to the dark side. Soon. Very sooooon.
DeleteSounds like fun!!!! Sounds soooo similar to Encore with the falling out behind -- I was paranoid about it for a long time (which observers never helped by suggesting terrible things!) but getting to know him, I now realize (now that I know his body, re: original bone scan, etc) that it is one or all of (a) not truly forward, (b) not connected, such a faker, and (c) needs more hind end strength.
ReplyDeleteSo glad to hear y'all are getting to hang out and yay for blogger buddies!!!!
It's a weird sensation for sure but it really doesn't seem like a lameness to me. And Simon is SOOO much fun!
DeleteSydney has been having this same issue on and off since I started really riding her again in the spring. It always feels more like an "oops I forgot that leg" than anything else, and typically happens where the arena is deeper. It also doesn't happen every ride. Have yet to find anything wrong with her, but I haven't done x-rays either. Might have to try the spirals and shoulder exercises.
ReplyDelete