T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
655.1 | | PBA::KEIRAN | | Mon Jul 18 1988 12:00 | 18 |
| Tina,
The question that comes to my mind first is: do you really "need"
to lunge this horse? Horses just like people are sometimes forced
to do things they really hate, and become sour doing them. Is he
that hot at 25 that you feel you need to lunge him before you ride?
I have found that trying to force a horse to do something he is
truly unhappy doing will only make him harder to work with. Try
streching him out by hand walking him in small circles and pulling
his head right around to his side to strech his muscles, which is
what I do with my 5 year old because I don't want to sour him to
the lunge line.
Good luck,
Linda
|
655.2 | reply to .1 | SALEM::DOUGLAS | | Mon Jul 18 1988 13:54 | 13 |
| Re .1
No, I don't need to lunge him prior to riding because he is really
sweet to ride. My reason for lunging him is that He only gets ridden
once a week and I want him to keep his muscle tone. Where he's older,
the more in shape he is, the healthier he will be. (Sort of like
an apple a day...).
I really don't want him turning into a porker. That's when you
come into trouble when they're overweight, underdeveloped, and that
age.
Tina
|
655.3 | Ground Driving?? | GENRAL::BOURBEAU | | Mon Jul 18 1988 14:16 | 6 |
| Our trainer taught our colt to lunge by ground driving him with
long lines. WHen the colt tried to turn toward him, the trainer
used the off line to hold him in position. Maybe this would help.
George
|
655.4 | | PBA::KEIRAN | | Mon Jul 18 1988 14:24 | 13 |
| Tina,
Does the horse have a place for turnout? We have a 25 year old
standardbred at our barn that never gets ridden, is left in the
pasture all summer, and in a small turnout area during the winter,
and the horse doesn't look a day over 15. Its really amazing how
a horse will keep itself in shape if it has a good sized area in
which to move on its own. Try cutting back on his food to keep
him healthy, but not too skinny.
Linda
|
655.5 | Long Reining | RDGCSS::RICHARDS | Mike. DTN 830-4533. Reading, UK. | Tue Jul 19 1988 04:54 | 14 |
|
Tack him up for long reining, with two lunge line, and standing
behind him ask him to go forward. When he is used to this, stand
further back from him and try large circles. You will eventually
end up standing in the correct position for lunging with the outside
rein running above his hocks, this rein will enable you to hold
him out onto the circle. After a while you can get rid of the outside
rein.
Using the two reins you can go from lunging on the right rein,
straighten him out to long rein and back onto the circle on left
rein without having to stop.
Mike.
|
655.6 | walking for fitness | ASD::WIMBERG | | Wed Jul 20 1988 11:20 | 11 |
|
How long to you lunge him? Just a hand walk up and down some small
hills for fifteen or twenty minutes would do just as well don't
you think? If he's only working once a week you don't want him too
fit. Of course this means that you walk fifteen or twenty minutes
too. (Good for your legs my mother would say)
Nancy
ps - I mean WALK not stroll
|
655.7 | why not try bareback | TWEED::HARPER | | Thu Jul 21 1988 14:45 | 11 |
| Why not try bareback? After weeks of arguing with my two older
horses about how we were going about this lunging business, I decided
that bareback might be the answer. This seems to help everybody!!
The horses get about 15 to 20 minutes exercise and I certainly get
an equal amount. Lots cooler for everybody during all this heat!!
Good luck with whatever you decide to do.
Betsy
|
655.8 | Ideas from the gurus please | CMOTEC::HARWOODJ | Judy Harwood - REO - 830 2879 | Wed Jun 24 1992 10:38 | 21 |
|
Well folks, my mare Crunchie (she of sesamoiditous
fame - see note 1581.10 ) has is now being treated by a
homoeopathic vet over here in the UK. (If folks
are interested in details of this type of treatment
I'll enter a seperate note).
As part of her treatment, he's requested that I start
working her 10 - 15mins on the lunge each day.
Crunch being someone who's seen the world, knows
how to literally run rings round me, particularly if we
just lunge, with no variety. Unfortunately I don't have
any poles at my displosal, so any work along those
lines is impossible.
Has anyone any ideas on how to break the monotany,
keep Crunch interested, yet prevent her from playing
every trick in the book on me.
Judy
|
655.9 | Add transitions? | GENRAL::LEECH | A closed mouth gathers no feet. | Wed Jun 24 1992 11:29 | 17 |
|
Have you tried adding upward/downward transitions to the work? The
transitions will keep her thinking and will help her develope balance
and muscles that she will need to start her under saddle work again.
Keep the transitions random, both in gait and the place that you ask
for them on the circle. Get more and more demanding that she do them
as soon as you ask for them to help develope her obedience to voice and
physical (whip and lunge line) cues. I have a mare that developes an
attitude problem every so often and to cure it I put her on the lunge
line and we school transitions until she mellows out again.
You might also want to add side reins to help reach for the bit and
come forward when you lunge.
Pat
|
655.10 | long-lining! | AAHT::CJS | | Wed Jun 24 1992 15:37 | 6 |
| long-lining!
wonderful training, more interesting for the horse, and gets you *both*
some exercise. i suspect there are descriptions elsewhere.
-cjs-
|
655.11 | Yeah, long lining! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Wed Jun 24 1992 21:31 | 10 |
| I second the suggestion for long-lining! With a bridle and a 25' set of
reins you can do circles, figure eights, obstacle courses weaving
around road cones, discarded tires(tyres in the UK?) or even hay
bales. With long-lines, you could go large around the entire arena,
changing directions, do circles, turns, serpentines, half circle and
reverse, just about any pattern you can do under saddle. If you have
access to cavaletti, you could also add a section of them off the track
and go over them occassionally for additional variety.
John
|