I BELIEVE SHOW HORSES CAN BE TRAIL HORSES TOO. ITS NICE TO SEE PEOPLE WHO SHOW HORSES WANT TO TAKE THEM OUT ON THE TRAIL. I FEEL SORRY FOR THOSE HORSES WHO LIVE THEIR ENTIRE LIFE IN A STALL AND SHOWRING. SHOW HORSES NEED TO HAVE FUN TOO, NOT JUST THE SAME OVER AND OVER BORING JOB, GOING IN CIRCLES AROUND A RING. GOING OUT FOR A TRAIL RIDE TO THEM, I THINK, WOULD BE LIKE A LITTLE VACATION. (ONCE THEY ARE EXPERIENCED ON THE TRAIL) WE LIKE TO TAKE VACATIONS FROM OUR SAME OLD OVER AND OVER JOB DONT WE? SO WHY SHOULDNT THEY?
In 2008 after the death of my good friend I became the owner of his hosre. This horse was in a show barn since the age of two, he was seven when he came to me. I took off his blankets, unbraided his tail, and cut it so not to drag on the ground and turned him out. I let him just get used to the ohter horses, and new enviroment for the winter ( he came to me late sept. ) In May 2009 i started riding him on local trails he adjusted well but didnt pay attention to the footing as i assume in the arena he didnt have to step ove tree branches etc.. On mmay 18th that same year I pushed his skills to far and took him a pretty steep hill, he stumbled on a rock, went to one knee and tried to recover side ways on the trail. He sliped, we rolled, I was knocked out the first time he rolled over me. We ended up after tumbling 30ft several times right where we started. He was fine, I ended up with my pelvic broken in 3 places, my back broken in 2 places, 2 broken ribs and 12 fracutres. The dr. recomened i dont ride anymore (yeah like that was gonna happen)After therapy and lots of work, I was back in the saddle on Sept. 15th that same year. I am again riding the same horse on some awsome trails, beaches etc.. we learned to trust each other again and I dont push him to fast. He has learned that the ground he now travels requires attention.
Boy, Jolene, you sound like you are being held together with safety pins and duct tape. Good aditude, just keep on going. Wish you and your horse the best of luck on those trails.
Thanks for the interesting article. There is a special service for helping people start trail riding at http://www.coastalhorseback.com. This company uses the comfort of the herd to calm novice trailer riders/horses in a beautiful setting on the San Mateo Coast in California. The trails have normal obstacles like kids with skateboards, kite flyers, dogs, motorcycles, etc. and the novice horse learns from the accompanying experienced horses how to cope with these things. The offer rides on the beach and through redwoods.