Remember the last time you were out walking and got a small pebble in your shoe, or wore a new pair of hiking boots only to find they were pinching your toes or rubbing a heel the wrong way? If you could not stop immediately to remedy the problem, you quickly found a way of walking that minimized the discomfort until you could. You may also have become very vocal about your pain until companions slowed down to help you find a solution.
Since horses cannot talk, they must find nonverbal ways to communicate with their riders when something bothers them. When a saddle pinches, rubs or digs, the stoic horse may simply grunt and bear it. Most horses, however, will try to send a message to their riders. Do any of the following scenarios sound familiar?
If these horses were children, we could say they were acting out. What we need to do is look at their behaviors as communication. While there are no magic tricks in horse training, and there can often be more than one reason for particular behaviors, each of these horses may be telling the rider that the saddle is hurting his back.
If we only rode bareback, our horses would soon become sore where our seatbones continually dig into their back muscles. We, too, would become sore from sitting on the same anatomical points without relief and from the continual muscle tension needed to maintain our balance as the horse’s muscles and skeleton wiggle and bend beneath us. Putting aside fantasies about flying through flower-strewn meadows with manes and hair blowing in the wind, there are some very practical reasons why saddles were invented.
Saddles serve two functions. They protect a horse from the drilling pressure of the rider’s seatbones by spreading that pressure out over a wider load-bearing surface, and they provide riders with a comfortable seating surface on a stable platform, which helps them maintain correct posture for long periods of time. The tree also provides a place to hang stirrups, which help a rider distribute weight along an anatomical continuum from the seat, to the thighs, to the knees, to the balls of the feet. This not only gives greater security, but also more comfort on longer rides.
The saddle’s rigid tree is the key element that provides both of these benefits. If the tree doesn’t fit, neither will the saddle. Fitting a rigid platform to a curvaceous back with angles that constantly change as the animal moves has been the saddle maker’s challenge over the centuries.
A western saddle’s tree, not its leather skirts, is what supports and spreads the rider’s weight over the horse’s back. The tree’s fork must have the correct width and flare to fit the horse’s withers without rubbing them and fit the shoulders without pinching or constricting. The fork and the cantle are joined by curved sides, or bars. If the bars do not contact the horse’s back smoothly from fork to cantle, the tree will either rock or bridge (sit on its four “corners”) creating pressure points.
Although an English tree is shaped differently, the head or pommel must also fit the horse’s withers and shoulders without rubbing or pinching. However, the side pieces connecting the head to the cantle are narrow and set much higher up than those of a western saddle. They form the basis of a seat for the rider, but are not intended to conform to the horse’s back.
Instead, panels stuffed with wool flocking, synthetic flocking, natural or synthetic felt, or various kinds of foam sit between the horse’s back and this rigid seat to spread the rider’s weight over a larger area. If the stuffing is not in the right shape to fit a particular horse’s anatomy, the result can be pressure points or a bearing surface that’s too small to spread the rider’s weight adequately.
A properly fitted saddle sits securely in place without touching the horse’s spine. It has no tendency to rock from side to side or front to back. Most importantly, it provides a broad load-bearing surface that fits flush along the horse’s back muscles on either side of the spine. Follow these steps to check the fit of your saddle:
Padding narrows the tree; how much will depend on the thickness and rigidity of the pad. Observe from the side whether adding the pad has narrowed the tree so much that the saddle now tips backward and the seat is no longer level.
Many riders spend hours sitting in saddles at tack shops to find the model that fits them best. Then they head home, throw it on their horse and never stop to think that the saddle has to fit the horse as well. Finding a saddle that fits you both can be a frustrating search. If you have to compromise, however, make it on your side of the saddle. Why? Because pain from a poorly fitting saddle will cause negative horse behaviors, ranging from annoying to unsafe. Until you remove that source of pain, you won’t solve those behaviors with gadgets like tie-downs or piles of pads.
The combination of horse plus saddle plus rider is not static. It constantly moves and shifts at every stride. And what fits today may not fit the same way tomorrow if horse or rider gains or loses weight or muscle. A young animal’s back may change dramatically until he is about 5 years old. The out-of-shape adult horse that finally gets back in shape will have different musculature at the end of his conditioning program than he did at the start. The senior horse’s back is likely to change with age. Repeat your saddle-fitting check periodically to make sure your saddle is still comfortable for your horse and you will be rewarded with a happier horse that can concentrate on the day’s lessons instead of the pain in his back.
Read on for more on tack fit.
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Thanks for the help. I can't tell if my mare's "attitude" is because the saddle bothers her or if she is just having a mare mood! I will take the Saddle Fit info with me to the barn to check out the problem.
I just wanted to say thnaks so much for this article! I have always struggled to try and figure out if a saddle fits correctly on my own. This article has helped me so much. And it's all true! Thanks again!
I just wanted to say thnaks so much for this article! I have always struggled to try and figure out if a saddle fits correctly on my own. This article has helped me so much. And it's all true! Thanks again!
I think the article was extremely well written. I intend to use it during my new saddle selection process. I think the advise given was excellent.
very well written and easy to follow. thank you!
This article on Saddle Fitting provided helpful for me and my horse.
This was a very detailed and helpful article.
Thanks for the informative and practical article!
great article
In my opinion, Supracor pads are the best. They use newer technology and the pads are filled with "honeycomb" material that evenly dispenses pressure. I just bought my second one, a Supracor "Cool Grip". It's so ventilated for cooling the back you can actually see through tiny holes in it. My horses love them. They are worth the high price!