Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Haffies require custom bridles

I admit it, I’m not a huge tack connoisseur. I generally don’t care about name brands, – I want my stuff to fit, to function, and to last, and not be too difficult to take care of. I try to find the simplest thing that works, and just use that. This means I have no flashes, no figure 8s, no martingales, and generally one bit for jumping and one for dressage (unless I get really lucky and can use the same one for both). I also tend not to buy something new if I already have something that will work. For example, Cash’s 15-year-old double bridle is now Red’s snaffle bridle, Saga’s brown jumping bridle (bought off Craigslist for $50) was also used by Oberon and Echo.

Enter one Paddington Bear. The brown jumping bridle sort of fit him – if I punched extra holes on the cheek pieces, used the largest hole on the throatlatch and noseband, and switched out the browband to something larger. None of my other bridles even came close to squeezing around his oddly-shaped face – if they fit in one dimension, they were horribly wrong somewhere else.

Ok, fine, I decided to suck it up and buy him a new black dressage bridle (the brown one would work for jumping). Step one – measure horse for bridle. I found a handy online measuring guide and went to work. Here’s what I found:
  • Browband, noseband, and throatlatch – Warmblood sized
  • Crown piece (headstall) – Horse sized
  • Cheek pieces – Pony sized
Um, yeah. Try finding a standard bridle that matches those measurements. I must have looked at 10 different bridles, diligently checking the measurements listed against what I had, and failing. OK, FINE then, I decided I could create a custom pieced bridle. There are a couple of places online that let you pick the cheek pieces and browband and headstall, mix and match, and come up with something that works. Sure, they’re a bit more pricey, but whatever, they would fit Mr. Haffington, right?

And that’s when I discovered that when you buy a Warmblood-sized noseband (for a regular bridle, not a monocrown), that long attached piece that goes over their ears? That’s ALSO warmblood sized… and I needed that to be pony-sized. And if you purchase a horse-sized headstall, the throatlatch is attached to it, because it’s all one piece of leather… but the throatlatch is ALSO horse-sized, and Paddy needs a Warmblood-sized throatlatch.

I swear, shopping for a Paddy-sized bridle is worse than buying jeans for myself.

Paddy thinks his face is perfectly normal... for a Haffie.

In desperation, I contacted my saddler and begged her to see if she would make me a completely custom bridle. She told me straight up she doesn’t like making bridles, because they are fussy and fidgety and have to be done by hand. I begged some more, explaining all the measuring and shopping I had done, and she admitted that she had some spare pieces that she had been working on that might work. Lucky for me, the noseband was perfect, she had pony-sized cheekpieces, and a lovely horse-sized monocrown headstall that allowed for a throatlatch that buckled on BOTH sides. All that was missing was a warmblood-sized throatlatch and browband, so I begged some more and she agreed to make them for me. Bonus was that the price she quoted me was about half of what a fully custom bridle would have cost me from most other saddlers.

Note the monocrown, double-buckle-end throatlatch, and the perfect Haffie-sized noseband.

I did have to wait for quite a while for my extra bridle pieces to be made. I know they weren’t her highest priority – for the most part, she does saddles, not bridles. Still, it was well worth the wait. Paddy LOVES the monocrown, and I am now a huge fan of crank nosebands. Not because I crank mine down – it’s actually quite loose. But the padding under the chin really seems to make him more comfortable, and anything that my horse likes, I’m all for. The leather quality is something I like – it seems quite sturdy but it’s also nicely supple. I will say that the edges are not as well finished as my $500 double (which I bought used for $100 15 years ago), but that’s only something I see up close so it’s not really something I find to be a problem. It looks very nice on him, I think!

Craftsmanship is nice, and he loves the padding under his chin. I also love how the ring on the crank allows the noseband to sit at a slightly different angle under his chin than it does over his nose. I've always had a problem with that on a regular noseband.

Overall, Paddy gives it five Haffie stars. Wait… does five Haffie stars equal two-and-a-half stars? Does he have to give it TEN Haffie stars to make five regular stars? I’m so confused…

Whatever. We both like it!

23 comments:

  1. Ha! I have the same problem with Shy a lot. She needs a larger size browband and smaller cheek pieces. So hard to fit! Lucky you were able to get a bridle custom made!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Haffies are really hard to fit, that's for sure!

      Delete
  2. Gahhhh, horses never make things easy for us, do they? Hahah. Glad you finally found something that Paddy approves of :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I know, right? How about a horse that takes standard, normal-sized horse stuff?

      Delete
  3. He would look cute in a bridle made of twine, but this is nice too :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sort of like saying he would look great in a burlap sack, lol!

      Delete
  4. A haffie owner on my yard ordered a bridle for her haffie from a German catalog/website called loesdau.
    The first one she ordered came in my girl Nancy's FriesianX monster size so i bought that one from her and she re - ordered.
    Love my bridle, if you find one you like on the website and have trouble getting it to the States I'm happy to give you my address, have it delivered here & I'll send it on to you if needed

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Forgot to say custom bridle is fab, I mentioned the website & delivery options in case you want a separate cheaper schooling one or whatever...

      Delete
    2. Aoife, good to know about a secondary bridle source! Thank you! I'm pretty happy with the one we have and generally my bridles last for years and years, so I think we're set for a while.

      Delete
  5. The things we do for love... erm, I mean horses.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Seriously. Thanks for all the bridle-shopping advice, btw!

      Delete
  6. Your haffie called me, he gave me a very long list of things he wants ;)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Dammit, I KNEW I shouldn't have given him that cell phone "for emergencies"!!!

      Delete
  7. Wow it looks great on him! I'm a big fan of cranks too, the way it fits over their nose just seems more comfortable than the regular types.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I never really liked cranks because... well, some people crank the ever-loving SHIT out of them. But having used one (carefully), I love the way they sit and the padding under the chin. I'm a convert!

      Delete
  8. I feel the pain - I have a Morgan, who has a cob sized head, except for the throatlatch which she needs in pony size, plus a horse sized browband. What even. Not as bad as yours... but that custom bridle looks fab!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh my, another fitting nightmare! What brand of bridle were you able to find to fit her?

      Delete
  9. Replies
    1. Thanks! He practices suave looks all the time so he's always camera-ready. ;)

      Delete
  10. LOL! I am looking at having to go custom for my arabians (for a dressage bridle - I can find brown leather everywhere, but black, um apparently not!) - pony sized head stall, cob sized noseband, and a horse sized browband. The cob sized bridle I have now JUST works. Tightened all the way to the top on the cheeks, noseband on the last hole, browband is snug but works... though I found out a way to stretch it - gently - so I'm going to try that until my new job starts - aka we can afford stuff again...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If the browband is your biggest issue right now, you might try purchasing an extra. I think they can be had for about $20 if you go with the non-blingy kind, although the leather quality isn't great.

      I'd measure your kids and then compare measurements to off-the-rack bridles. I found that a "cob" or "horse" sized bridle varied WILDLY in the measurements between brands. Unfortunately I just couldn't find one that worked for Paddy. Hopefully you will have better luck!

      Delete