If you haven't figured it out by now, I'm ALL about low-maintenance. I don't want to have to get up three hours early before a show to spend bleary-eyed time detangling hair or somesuch nonsense. I want to take the horse off the trailer, slap my tack on & be ready to go.
I am also not one of the Hair Nazis. You know, the ones who swoon every time you bang a tail or, horrors, brush it out. Yeah, I know you can hear me, Hunter Princesses. ;P
I have startling news for you, Hair Nazis, you may want to sit down for the revelation -- IT'S HAIR. IT GROWS BACK. In fact, if your horse is on a good hoof supplement, it grows back rather quickly.
So. I will colour you not surprised when I tell you that I decided to try giving Solo a true eventer tail.
I've always liked the look -- a clean line down the tail bone, defining the hindquarters and giving a neat, braided look without actually braiding (which I recently learned from a dressage judge was a no-no in eventing; a tail braid makes your horse's back look stiff & can cost you points both in the dressage ring & in stadium, where stiffly braided tails have been observed to cost rails pulled by trailing back feet). I recruited our lovely BO as I saw that her TB had a grown out version.
Before (the ends just touch the ground, but the top is always shaggy with 500 different lengths due to Mr. I Love To Scratch My Butt):


And after, BO's handiwork (you have to take off a LOT of hair):


So far, I rather like it. Standing right next to it looks a bit weird as I am not used to it. But when I take three steps back, it looks really nice & provides instant finesse back there. If Solo hadn't decided to be a bum & cock his hip, you could see the nice banged end just above the fetlock.
I should get video of our dressage test on Sunday, so I am excited to see how it looks under saddle!
In riding news, we've not been able to do much the past fews days due to my busy schedule. We did get some nice jump work in on Sunday -- I finally successfully built a gymnastic line & we worked through that, then did a few of the regular jumps.
I tried out the great tip P gave us in our lesson on Sat: being taught to jump from a two-point position makes one prone to jumping up the neck. I think all of us who have ridden in the hunters can attest to this fact! It's something I've really been struggling with a lot lately too, grrr.
When approaching the jump, just before take off, just think of shoving your butt towards the cantle & feet out in front of you like landing gear.
I gave it a whirl. On each approach, my thoughts went, Lift the poll, wrap your legs, shoulders back, soften, LANDING GEAR DOWN, as we counted down the strides. It totally freaking worked!! I stayed back in the air, my legs stayed underneath & on my horse & I landed with my foot beneath me. Yahoo!!!
I am also not one of the Hair Nazis. You know, the ones who swoon every time you bang a tail or, horrors, brush it out. Yeah, I know you can hear me, Hunter Princesses. ;P
I have startling news for you, Hair Nazis, you may want to sit down for the revelation -- IT'S HAIR. IT GROWS BACK. In fact, if your horse is on a good hoof supplement, it grows back rather quickly.
So. I will colour you not surprised when I tell you that I decided to try giving Solo a true eventer tail.
I've always liked the look -- a clean line down the tail bone, defining the hindquarters and giving a neat, braided look without actually braiding (which I recently learned from a dressage judge was a no-no in eventing; a tail braid makes your horse's back look stiff & can cost you points both in the dressage ring & in stadium, where stiffly braided tails have been observed to cost rails pulled by trailing back feet). I recruited our lovely BO as I saw that her TB had a grown out version.
Before (the ends just touch the ground, but the top is always shaggy with 500 different lengths due to Mr. I Love To Scratch My Butt):


And after, BO's handiwork (you have to take off a LOT of hair):


So far, I rather like it. Standing right next to it looks a bit weird as I am not used to it. But when I take three steps back, it looks really nice & provides instant finesse back there. If Solo hadn't decided to be a bum & cock his hip, you could see the nice banged end just above the fetlock.
I should get video of our dressage test on Sunday, so I am excited to see how it looks under saddle!
In riding news, we've not been able to do much the past fews days due to my busy schedule. We did get some nice jump work in on Sunday -- I finally successfully built a gymnastic line & we worked through that, then did a few of the regular jumps.
I tried out the great tip P gave us in our lesson on Sat: being taught to jump from a two-point position makes one prone to jumping up the neck. I think all of us who have ridden in the hunters can attest to this fact! It's something I've really been struggling with a lot lately too, grrr.
When approaching the jump, just before take off, just think of shoving your butt towards the cantle & feet out in front of you like landing gear.
I gave it a whirl. On each approach, my thoughts went, Lift the poll, wrap your legs, shoulders back, soften, LANDING GEAR DOWN, as we counted down the strides. It totally freaking worked!! I stayed back in the air, my legs stayed underneath & on my horse & I landed with my foot beneath me. Yahoo!!!