Anyone who knows me knows that I am a trend hater. If it's mainstream & popular & all the cool kids want it, I automatically don't trust it, don't like it, & don't want it; I'm going to approach said thing with very critical thinking & questions galore, because usually, said trendy thing ends up being ridiculous (giant sunglasses that make you look like a moronic alien, anyone?). And I'm not going to call something great unless it meets some pretty high standards. Call me contradictory, I'm ok with that.
So when I started hearing about Ecogold saddle pads, I kind of rolled my eyes & thought, here we go, another trendy saddle pad, the next magical Mattes pad that everyone just must have.
But then something unexpected happened. I attended our Area II Annual Meeting back in January & John Da Silva (who was a textile engineer long before Ecogold began) presented the Ecogold product line to us. OMG, there was science. Someone actually tested the product, used common sense & data & THERE WAS SCIENCE! Yeah, yeah, I'm a science nerd.
I was intrigued & impressed & I started watching a little more closely. But the things weren't cheap & I wasn't quite ready to be convinced yet.
Summer came along & I was riding as I usually do -- with ThinLine pad plus baby pad plus (when jumping) sheepskin pad. Ugh. And the Thinline does. not. breathe. I needed to combine real shock absorption with breathability, as the more I learn about equine tissue, the more I realize the importance of keeping things cool when working. My mind wandered back to that wintery presentation.
I sent an email to Mr. Da Silva with an embarrassingly long list of questions. Which he answered almost immediately & by 'answered', I mean 'covered ALL the bases'. So I took the plunge & ordered a Secure Jumper pad. I talked to the ever-helpful Patricia & she even checked on some material colours for me.
When I pulled it out of the box, the first thing that struck me was how lovely & well-made it looked. I put it on Solo & it was definitely shaped with withers in mind! The girth loops fell EXACTLY below my billets (almost never happens!) & the grippiness to horse & saddle felt great. I ordered the XL as per the website since my saddles are 17.5 & 18" & it's a little bit big for both my saddles; in fact, it looks kinda silly with my dressage saddle (I can only buy one, sheesh, so I decided the jumping saddle was the priority to pad with grip & bounce) but fortunately, I have no qualms about looking goofy.
I have three rides on it now, one with the dressage saddle & two with the jump saddle. I LOVE IT. And I think Solo approved as well. In the dressage saddle, we had some of our best long, stretchy trot ever & he was sooo consistent in the bridle, which he'll only do if his back is super happy. In both saddles, the sweat marks were about the best I've ever seen on this horse & El Finicky Topline.
I could tell air had been traveling through the material -- I didn't have to peel it off like a piece of tape (re ThinLine). The grip kept the pad in place without billet straps too. We still had a tiny bit of saddle shifting to the side, but given my current extreme lopsidedness (and Solo's), that is hardly surprising; there is only so much a pad can do! I feel confident that once I get my left leg rehabbed to some semblance of normalcy, that will no longer be an issue.
So far, so great -- I've yet to really put it to the test of XC or a hard-core trail, but thus far, I can say that it's a great-looking, great-riding pad made by great people with a lot of potential once we get back into real work!
Does this mean people are going to think I'm trendy now?
So when I started hearing about Ecogold saddle pads, I kind of rolled my eyes & thought, here we go, another trendy saddle pad, the next magical Mattes pad that everyone just must have.
But then something unexpected happened. I attended our Area II Annual Meeting back in January & John Da Silva (who was a textile engineer long before Ecogold began) presented the Ecogold product line to us. OMG, there was science. Someone actually tested the product, used common sense & data & THERE WAS SCIENCE! Yeah, yeah, I'm a science nerd.
I was intrigued & impressed & I started watching a little more closely. But the things weren't cheap & I wasn't quite ready to be convinced yet.
Summer came along & I was riding as I usually do -- with ThinLine pad plus baby pad plus (when jumping) sheepskin pad. Ugh. And the Thinline does. not. breathe. I needed to combine real shock absorption with breathability, as the more I learn about equine tissue, the more I realize the importance of keeping things cool when working. My mind wandered back to that wintery presentation.
I sent an email to Mr. Da Silva with an embarrassingly long list of questions. Which he answered almost immediately & by 'answered', I mean 'covered ALL the bases'. So I took the plunge & ordered a Secure Jumper pad. I talked to the ever-helpful Patricia & she even checked on some material colours for me.
Oh, yeah. Crappy cell phone pic. |
When I pulled it out of the box, the first thing that struck me was how lovely & well-made it looked. I put it on Solo & it was definitely shaped with withers in mind! The girth loops fell EXACTLY below my billets (almost never happens!) & the grippiness to horse & saddle felt great. I ordered the XL as per the website since my saddles are 17.5 & 18" & it's a little bit big for both my saddles; in fact, it looks kinda silly with my dressage saddle (I can only buy one, sheesh, so I decided the jumping saddle was the priority to pad with grip & bounce) but fortunately, I have no qualms about looking goofy.
I have three rides on it now, one with the dressage saddle & two with the jump saddle. I LOVE IT. And I think Solo approved as well. In the dressage saddle, we had some of our best long, stretchy trot ever & he was sooo consistent in the bridle, which he'll only do if his back is super happy. In both saddles, the sweat marks were about the best I've ever seen on this horse & El Finicky Topline.
I could tell air had been traveling through the material -- I didn't have to peel it off like a piece of tape (re ThinLine). The grip kept the pad in place without billet straps too. We still had a tiny bit of saddle shifting to the side, but given my current extreme lopsidedness (and Solo's), that is hardly surprising; there is only so much a pad can do! I feel confident that once I get my left leg rehabbed to some semblance of normalcy, that will no longer be an issue.
So far, so great -- I've yet to really put it to the test of XC or a hard-core trail, but thus far, I can say that it's a great-looking, great-riding pad made by great people with a lot of potential once we get back into real work!
Does this mean people are going to think I'm trendy now?