well, mine would have to be when i was hunting on my pony China. She got very excited and started to rush! and i was continualy trying to slow her down, Till it came to a big log(1.5m just guessing) and cause in Australia we had a drought it was still very dry, so the horse in front of me was aout 16.3 17hh, so as the horse in front of me as cantering on, he/she was kicking up dirt into my eyes, and i couldnt see so i had to close my eyes cause the dirt was hurting my eyes. And by the time i opened them there was this log about 2 strides ahead of me, and i dident have time to turn her away, so she stoped....well should i say skidded to a stop before the jump. and i FLEW off and landed on my back on the log, not next to the log ON the log. it dident hurt as much as it would of if i dident use my protective vest. Other wise it would hav really hurt. I got away with a grazed thigh and a sore back the next day.
mine would be when i was learning to jump and my pony dusty was really a good jumper and i was doing a caveletie and he decided to jump it 80cm instead so i fell off and landed on my bum and was lying there and dusty decided to run away so it took me my mum and my riding instructor ages to catch him in the paddock cause he was always such a ninconpoop (but very cute and nice in his own way) and he didnt want to be ridden ne more lol and we finnaly caught him with food-_- :)
mine was out hunting as well, I was 15, riding in the Keith Hunt at Willalooka, on SOUTHWARK ( goofy) . It was very sandy and on the way back , with 30 riders jumping the ground got very chopped up. We jumped over a log that was in a tree , about a metre high. Goofy hit it with one knee and I fell off out the front, landed in front and under him as he was landing . My helmet fell off, his hoof hit me in the side of the head. Just a glancing blow, but enough to have 22 stitches. It didn't bleed much and I didn't feel a thing. Found my hat, he must have trodden on it as it was squashed!!!
The worst experience I had was during one of my lessons. I was in a lesson with a girl who has a horse that is in love with my horse, and vice versa. It was the first time we had been in a lesson together. I bet money that the two of them decided in their horse language to be evil because all of a sudden her horse started acting up. He was running out of fences and just being a butt. Well it was my turn to do the course. SO we were going around it just fine and then we came to this line. My horse started to jump it and at the last minute she veered left. I had started to get into my jumping position so when she veered left, I didn't but she pulled me and I slammed into the jump standard. Still in the saddle and holding onto the reins she spooked because of me hitting the jump standard and I could feel her starting to want to take off. So I kicked my foot out of the left stirrup and made an emergency "exit" and landed on my feet but the momentum brought me to my knees. My horse never refuses, never runs out. My shoulder hurt for weeks after that because it was the thing that hit the standard the hardest.
mine was a couple weeks ago, i was riding this tiny pony who i thought couldn't do anything too bad, but we were jumping a course andf he spooked and he threw me into the wall. i was mostly okay, but i cracked one of my ribs and it huuuuuurt!
Hi! I had the privilege of seeing Edward Gall and Moorlands Totillas at the Europeans at Windsor just recently...they are 'totally' beautiful together..I have never witnessed a Dressage human and equine partnership like theirs..long may they inspire…
Hello! Have you seen Jean Francois Pignon and his lovely horses and ponies? They are ALL 'at one with each other'... INSPIRING...check him out...HAPPY CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR TO ALL...
During this sequence it is fascinating the watch this young horse playing with the biomechanical properties of his vertebral column. When the back muscles properly convert the thrust generated by the hind legs into horizontal forces, (forward moveme…
Well, I don't mind admiting when a horse has the better of me, and this one certainly did!! It was a hard day of riding this tricky horse , and he got the best me on more than one occasion. As you can see in the photo , he's a mighty beast and will…
Kleng, an 18-year-old Norwegian Fjord horse who has carried hundreds of disabled riders on his strong back over the years at the NorthWest Therapeutic Riding Centre outside Bellingham, Washington, has been honoured for his work.