Video: ‘Bad Dancing’

Bad dancing: one way to interpret your horse’s weaving problem.

Reader Marcy Flickinger sent us this video of herself “dancing” with Brody, a lesson horse at the barn where her daughter rides. According to Marcy: “He’s got nice foot work in the ring … but some smooth moves outside of it too!” Brody weaves when his pasture buddy leaves to go work in the lesson ring less than twenty feet away from his turnout — as soon as his buddy comes back, the weaving stops.

Until then, it’s dancing time. (Note: must be logged in to Facebook to view.)

If you are in the horse world.. You know I’m being silly and making light of the fact that this horse is “weaving.”If…

Posted by Marcy Eiseman Flickinger on Friday, March 25, 2016

Nice moves, guys.

Marcy assures us that Brody has feed, water and a lovely turnout — the weaving is just one of those unfortunate anxious OTTB traits that we have to live with sometimes.

Go riding!

Photo Challenge: 4 Shed Horsehair Sculptures

Art is everywhere … especially in the barn aisle this time of year.

This week, we wanted to see Horse Nation’s creative side and called for your best horsehair creations from the piles of fluff thanks to spring shedding season. As always, our readers delivered — here are four amazing horsehair sculptures.

Keep an eye out for next week’s 24-hour photo challenge! We announce challenge subjects on Monday around the middle of the day on both Instagram and Facebook.

Go riding!

#TBT: 7 Problems Only Tall Riders Will Understand

“You must play basketball!” No, I’m just a lowly horseback rider, thanks.

With my boots on, I hover around the 5’11”-6′ mark. My chosen discipline is reined cowhorse, meaning that my mounts are generally no taller than 15 hands. Why couldn’t I have fallen for a discipline requiring a 17-hand warmblood? Because life is cruel. Welcome to my world.

ponies

My good friend Chilly on Tiny Tim and me on Brave. Photo by Naomi Thomas.

1. Every horse, regardless of actual measured height, is too small.

It doesn’t matter if it’s 15.2 or 17.3 — prepare yourself for a lifetime of dwarfing impressively-heighted horses into looking like stunted ponies. When you finally find a horse that actually takes up your leg, your torso will still be too long and you’ll wind up looking like a junior on her first real horse. Sure, you might be the world’s best catch-rider but it won’t matter if you always look perpetually out of place.

True story: A group of students from my equestrian program as an undergrad went to work for a weekend at a thoroughbred sale, and a student about my height was only allowed to handle the broodmares — the weanlings all looked like midgets next to her and no prospective buyer wants a tiny racehorse.

rocky

Yep, that’s me… on 17-something hand full Belgian. Note that this horse looks TOTALLY NORMAL and not like the giant that he actually is. Photo by Karen Fry.

2. Looking for new tall boots/half chaps? Custom it is.

Yes, they’re expensive for everyone, but when you have to custom or semi-custom just about everything you own, buying new ANYTHING can mean some serious $$$$. In tall boots, I wear a size 11 in tall — and while you might imagine that many tall folks would have big feet, can you ever find that particular combination already stocked at the tack shop? No, of course not — so you ask them to order it, wait for it to ship in, then try it on, and then discover that maybe you’re actually an extra-tall. For years I wore men’s cowboy boots, because the western ladies boots in my size were about three times as expensive as they needed to be. (Does it really cost that much more in leather to cover my giant feet? Thanks, guys.)

Kristine Oakhurst/Flickr/Creative Commons License

Kristine Oakhurst/Flickr/Creative Commons License

3. …which means that you can’t borrow (or loan out) any of your clothing. To anyone. Ever.

I spent my four years of undergrad competing on my university’s western intercollegiate team, and then the next four years coaching the same team. Our teams’ running joke was that we had maybe 10 complete outfits of show clothes among a team of 30-plus riders — we borrowed and swapped from each other all the time, and the hunt seat team was pretty similar. In the western world, it was pretty easy to make size differences work; I loaned my chaps to the other tall riders on the team (of course, they were all men; I was the only Amazon) and you could get away with tucking in a western shirt to fit a smaller torso. On the hunt seat team, however, forget loaning your shirt or your jacket to a teammate if you’re around 5’10” or higher — it just doesn’t work. Snap a zipper right before your class? Better get out the electrical tape and hope the judge doesn’t notice, because ain’t nobody got your boot size.

Carterse/Flickr/Creative Commons License

Carterse/Flickr/Creative Commons License

4. And if you thought custom clothing was bad enough, you’ll need a custom saddle as well.

The photo below is my lovely friend Amelia (5’10”) with her Thoroughbred gelding Anteros “Piccadilly Circus” (17.2). Amelia’s custom saddle was designed to fit both her and Terry (as we call him), since Amelia, like myself, is built like a stork with legs up to here. As Amanda Uechi Ronan outlined in her piece earlier this week on saddle fit, getting the saddle to fit the person is just as challenging as getting it to fit the horse — and Amelia, naturally, required the extra-long flap so that her knees weren’t hanging out in space wishing there was a place for them in this world. The bottom line for this custom job? Over $5,000. (Good thing it fits, and good thing they both look so darn good in it.)

Photo courtesy of Amelia Maslen.

Photo courtesy of Amelia Maslen.

5. Going on a trail ride on your monstrously tall horse that finally takes up your leg? Watch your head.

This one’s pretty self-explanatory: All those nice branches that your normal-sized friends on their normal-sized horses fit so easily under become widow makers for you and your enormous draft/warmblood/giraffe that you’re riding. (Even if you’re like me on an average-sized Quarter horse, you’ll still need to duck. Often.) Sure, your friend in the front of the line might be getting all the spiderwebs out of the way — at what’s chest-height for you. Don’t worry, because you’ll still be eating every spider web that’s up at your level of the stratosphere.

6. Ready yourself to be the go-to guy for bridling/worming/ear plugs/getting the saddle off the high rack/changing the light bulb in the feed room/whatever.

Blaze throws his head up when it’s time to be bridled? Charlie doesn’t like getting his ear plugs in? Susie can’t reach the bridle on the rack in the tack room? Don’t worry, because you are there, tall rider, and you will get to help everyone with all of these problems. Able to braid Gustav the warmblood’s forelock without needing a stool to stand on? You are the man, and you’ve now inherited this duty for life — as well as other random things that no one else can reach, like washing the arena mirrors, getting things off the high shelf, fetching all that stuff from the gooseneck part of the horse trailer, and so on. You will never get the low rack in the tack room.

See that saddle all the way up there? Yep, that's going to be your saddle rack…forever. Lisa Brewster/Flickr/Creative Commons License

See that saddle all the way up there? Yep, that’s going to be your saddle rack…forever.
Lisa Brewster/Flickr/Creative Commons License

7. “But you have long legs! You can ride anything, you’ll never get bucked off!”

There is a saying among us tall riders, especially on those occasions in which someone thinks they have a sense of humor and asks you to ride their pony: “head down, man down.” Sure, we’ve got long legs, and yes, we can wrap those around the pony or horse and hang on pretty well… but we’re also proportionate beings, and if we have long legs, they’re usually balanced by a long torso that acts like a nice ol’ counterweight when things start going south. Lean a little bit and you’ve actually shifted your balance quite a lot… and on a pony, there’s nothing left to hang on to. So, yes, you’re right, we do have long legs… but we also have a better-than-average chance of getting thrown off balance on the top half, and down we go.

Not shown: a few moments later, when 12.2 hand Rain simply dropped his head and sent Amelia sailing. Photo provided by Amelia Maslen.

Not shown: a few moments later, when 12.2 hand Rain simply dropped his head and sent 5’10” Amelia sailing.
Photo by Kait Schultz.

Not that this has ever stopped me from riding and falling off of ponies, mind you. Because I might be a tall rider, but I’m just as horse crazy as the rest of us.

Team sorting at the Bitterroot Ranch on 12 hand pony Brave, my most favorite team sorting mount of all time.

Team sorting at the Bitterroot Ranch on 12-hand pony Brave, my most favorite team sorting mount of all time. Photo by Sascha Abramson.

Many thanks to fellow tall rider Amelia Maslen for photos and inspiration.

Short riders, don’t worry: Leslie wrote a list for you too. Check it out here! Go Riding!

SpectraVET Perf. of the Week: Kelley Farmer Sweeps Top 3

What’s better than winning the $100,000 International Hunter Derby at HITS Desert Circuit? Sweeping the top 3! Watch Kelley Farmer’s first-, second- and third-place rides.

Arguably, no one had a better weekend than Kelley Farmer in Thermal, California: her toughest competition in the $100,000 International Hunter Derby was herself, as she captured not only the win but second and third place as well! Let’s take a look at her second-round handy rides, starting with third place and working our way up.

Third place: Mindful, owned by Kensel LLC. Farmer and Mindful recently won the International Hunter Derby at HITS Ocala.

Second place: Publicized, owned by Amanda Hone. Now, personally I’m a sucker for a big, beautiful dapple-gray hunter, so I would have pinned this pair first — but that’s just me. I’m content to just sit here and covet this lovely animal.

First place: Baltimore, owned by Jane Gaston. Baltimore notched his first Derby win just a few weeks ago at Gulf Coast — he’ll definitely be one to watch this year!

Well done, Kelley Farmer! Our congratulations to the connections of these three talented hunters!

Go riding!

Why SpectraVET?

Reliable. Effective. Affordable.

SpectraVET is committed to providing only the highest-quality products and services to our customers, and to educating the world in the science and art of laser therapy.

We design and manufacture the broadest range of clinically-proven veterinary therapeutic laser products, which are represented and supported worldwide by our network of specialist distributors and authorized service centers.

World Equestrian Brands Helmet Cam: Mounted Archery

Practice makes perfect! Check out the rider’s point of view for this mounted archery practice session.

Mounted archery is a rapidly-growing equestrian sport all around the world, letting riders of all skill levels discover their inner warrior and precision skills. As you might imagine, it’s a discipline that requires plenty of practice — let’s mount up and ride a practice session aboard Lindsay the Haflinger!

Our rider is a pretty good shot! This practice session was made even more difficult by riding bareback — we’re definitely impressed!

Go mounted archery! Go riding!

Do you have a helmet cam of your own to share? Email the editor at [email protected]!

Horses in Ads: Bai ‘Horse Whisperer’

You know what ELSE don’t make sense? This commercial, but we kind of love it anyway.

Horse whispering: you’re doing it wrong … or ARE you? This commercial for Bai Antioxidant Infusion drinks might offend your inner dressage queen but we’re choosing to laugh at it instead:

You’re right, horse whisperer: some things just don’t make sense. But we love them anyway.

Need more horse commercials? Click the #HORSES IN ADS hashtag at the top of the page! If you have an ad that we haven’t spotted yet, email the editor at [email protected].

Tuesday Video: So Happy It’s Spring

This video sums up in 30 seconds how we feel about the fact that it’s finally officially springtime.

Spring has officially sprung! And this little pony sums up in thirty seconds of antics exactly how we feel about it: we don’t know if we want to go running, stuff our face or dance around wildly just for the joy of being alive.

(Note: must be logged in to Facebook to view.)

UN PONEY SUR PILE✎ UN PONEY SUR PILE – Celui-là quand il se défoule cela se voit !╰▶ ORIGINAL VIDEO PAGE ® Copyright hingrez eulalie

Posted by Horses-Videos on Wednesday, March 16, 2016

You go, little pony. Go do it all. Because it’s finally springtime and we’re excited too.

Go out there and get your Tuesday, Horse Nation. Go riding!

#horsenation ‘Grams of the Week

Another week of horse life, captured in your images!

‘Gram of the Day from @brittperrybrittperry: Oops. #equestrianproblems #horsesofinstagram #horsenation A photo posted by Horse Nation (@go_riding) on

Join the conversation! Follow us on Instagram at @go_riding and tag your public photos with #horsenation. We’ll share our favorites daily. Go riding!