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A Country Lady The Horses | The Riders | The Style Twitter & Instagram:

08/01/2024

What a pony & rider combination ✨🐴

Best of luck, Ellie ✨👏
14/12/2023

Best of luck, Ellie ✨👏

Ellie Hutchings, 18, will be appearing at the London International Horse Show.

😳🤩🔥
10/12/2023

😳🤩🔥

Horse Show Photo of the Day from the Fall Series at the World Equestrian Center in Ocala!!! It’s very rare that someone gets photo of the day twice, much less in the same week. But when your horse jumps like this...

Edit since the tags didn’t come over from Instagram: Chloe Reid and Crossover 4

What a combination 🤩
02/11/2022

What a combination 🤩

Go, Jonty 👏
13/08/2022

Go, Jonty 👏

On Wednesday this week I rode my 5yr old Ballymalone Dancer at the young horse class on the Friday before I had ridden in the same class Hartpury went well, Gatcombe for me went really badly. I absolutely hammered myself over this, I was chunnering, furious and blaming myself really badly……fast forward a few days and he was fantastic at Hartpury a particular highlight being the jumping and the gallop 🏇. I had to give myself a chance I had to go away believe in what I was doing, it is my way to push it incredibly hard, so I let myself do that (I find it comforting) and I had to go in with total belief. He repaid me in spades, he felt genuinely fantastic. It was more mentally challenging than the SJ final phase. I’m not really a great one for discussing this kind of thing openly but I really feel that the importance of knowing we ALL go through this kind of thing and we NEVER know what each other is dealing with is hugely significant. My lasting memory of Hartpury apart from the fantastic horse I rode will be friends and the people I saw there, all of which were so friendly and chatty. Thank you everyone, and please please BELIEVE.

11/08/2022

EPIC 🤩🙌⭐️

This is a very important topic…
20/06/2022

This is a very important topic…

LARGE numbers of horses will die owing to our inability to control their parasites if we do not change our worming practices. This was the warning given at a webinar on anthelmintic or wormer resistance, hosted by the Mare and Foal Sanctuary and presented by equine internal medicine specialist David...

A good read for anyone lacking confidence - Shoestring Eventing proof that it can be overcome with determination 👏
15/06/2022

A good read for anyone lacking confidence - Shoestring Eventing proof that it can be overcome with determination 👏

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22/05/2022

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As I go further on my journey with horses, I realise more & more that personal development is the key to getting better results with our horses, this personal development also opens us up to having better relationships with the people around us & to live a more fulfilling & meaningful life!
I encourage everyone out there to look for that improvement within yourself & aim for being the best you, that you can bring to this world.You might be surprised how much of a difference you can make in your lifetime!

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07/03/2022

Some wonderful initiatives to help the horses of Ukraine 🇺🇦❤️

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14/02/2022

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Why trainers PUSH horses TOO FAST

Klaus Balkenhol explains, "Although breeders have created a better horse, the market has created a demand for a stronger, healthier, more powerful horse. It's easier to sell a horse that looks
like a carefully developed eight-year-old, and not like a three- or four-year-old just beginning his career. If you force it, you can get a three-year-old to physically look like a developed eight-year-old. Too many colts remain stallions which, if approved, promise breeders higher prices as three-year-olds. Now 250 to 300 young stallions are presented each year, when only 40 or 50 will be approved.
Few breeders have the sense to geld the yearling stallions and leave them on the pasture to mature naturally. Instead, yearling stallions are brought into a stall, fed too much grain, and at three, look like six- or seven-year-olds. They have muscle mass, but not enough bone structure to support it. They look mature from the outside but aren't . . . and when started to work, degeneration sets in. Competitions also create pressure to push horses too fast as competitions are now scheduled throughout the year without any breaks."

Common Mistakes In Pushing Too Fast
Tightening the noseband: "A horse resists by sticking out his tongue. Tightening the noseband too much puts pressure on the nose and on the poll. If it is necessary to tighten the noseband very tightly, then something has gone very wrong in the basic training of the horse. The horse cannot be relaxed, the first step on the training scale," warns Klaus.

Specializing too early: "Drilling every day in the indoor arena is too intense for the young horse. It's very important, especially in the first two years of training, not to specialize the young horse. Training should include a variety of activities, including trail riding, which is good for the mind as well as building strength with hill work. It should include jumping, either free or low jumps under saddle, including small natural obstacles on the trail, and cavaletti. A variety of work will allow the horse to stay mentally fresh and to enjoy his work. Only when the horse is happy can dressage become art."

Not checking tack frequently: "Saddle and tack need to be checked constantly for proper fit and adjusted as the horse's body changes with growth, and as his fitness improves with the
training. If the noseband gets too low, for example, and the skin between the noseband and the bit is rubbed and becomes sore, this causes the horse discomfort and loss of relaxation.
Regularly check for sharp edges and bit problems in the horse's mouth and teeth."

Working too long: "The goal of our training is to build the horse's mind and his muscles. Suppleness and relaxation require adequate muscle strength. strengthening requires both contraction and relaxation. Blood flow and oxygenation occur when the muscle relaxes. If the muscle is kept in a constant state of contraction, it loses power and strength, and actually becomes smaller.
Frequent rest periods, especially for a young horse at a free walk on a long rein, are necessary. The rest periods are not for a rider's fatigue, but to allow the horse to stretch and relax his muscles. The rest breaks will give you a completely new horse. This is the systematic gymnasticizing of the horse."

Riding when the horseman is tense: "Horses are particularly sensitive to the rider's mood. A rider shouldn't ride if she is under undue stress or doesn't have the time to ride. If the rider has a bad day, give the horse a rest day or go for a relaxing trail ride; don't work in the arena. The horse mirrors the rider's mood."

Not praising the horse enough: "The horse must perform from joy, not subservience. Praising a horse frequently with voice, a gentle pat, or relaxing the reins is very important to keep the horse interested and willing. If the horse offers piaffe, for instance, because he's excited, praise him for it. You shouldn't stop the lesson at that point nor make a big deal out of it. If you don't want piaffe, quietly urge him forward into trot, but you should NEVER
punish him for offering the piaffe.

14/02/2022

So good 😆

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11/02/2022

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09/09/2021

What a legend 💖

07/04/2021

😆👏

17/02/2021

Stroller 😍

Please share & help if you can 💕
01/02/2021

Please share & help if you can 💕

**BREAKING NEWS - PLEASE HELP**
www.justgiving.com/campaign/lockdown-donkey-rescue

We have found ourselves in the middle of an urgent emergency rescue and we need your help...

A small herd of donkeys has been reported to us by an extremely concerned member of the public... We cannot share many details or photographs at this stage, as this is a serious welfare case, but we can tell you that their lives have been filled with untold suffering and neglect.

We know we have to act fast to save them from a very uncertain future, but we urgently need to raise the funds to make this happen. Some of them have already arrived at our sanctuary over the past couple of days in desperate need of specialist care and veterinary attention - one is just a baby, he arrived terrified, trembling and in very poor condition; covered in excrement, undernourished, thin and filthy.

We simply have to help them all, but their transport has already cost £2000 and we know that their quarantine and initial healthcare costs could easily exceed £5000 - they are underweight, their hooves are over-grown and they will undoubtedly need dental work and other treatment, so we are anticipating huge bills.

Can you help us rescue and care for these donkeys? We are losing thousands of pounds as we are forced to remain closed through yet another lock-down, but our vital rescue work simply must continue...

Please, please donate at the link if you can - these donkeys desperately need us, but we can't help them without you.

www.justgiving.com/campaign/lockdown-donkey-rescue

Thank you so much ❤

20/01/2021

Dabbling in the achives Jill has found an amazing photo of Mrs Parry her riding instructor, who taught her when she was just 5 years old. Mrs Parry with remarkable precision here jumps a pony through a hoop circa late 1950's

09/01/2021

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