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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:01 PM
#21
 Originally Posted by Fluffie
I can never remember the name of those stupid chestnut-things on the back of fetlocks! 
Ergots !
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:06 PM
#22
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:11 PM
#23
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:12 PM
#24
As for me...
I will never understand all of the things that come with riding in Hunterland, and I will never stop holding my breath/making stupid faces over jumps
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:12 PM
#25
I cannot tell my leads when I am cantering...
"I'm an idealist. I don't know where I'm going, but I'm on my way." 
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:17 PM
#26
 Originally Posted by MacknCody
I also can't "feel" the wrong diagonal. I have to look down. Anyone else have this problem?
I'm cool with my diagonal, but can't do it with my canter lead. Gotta work on that one!
Oh, and I don't know doodly about basic horse nutrition.
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:17 PM
#27
Remembering not to let anything medical panic the living snot out of me.
I know all the normal range stats for equines...and even know my own horses normal resp, heart rate...right down to each horses' normal temps depending on what time of the day it is. (both run a little higher normal range after 3 pm)
However anytime something is slightly wonky on either horse...I guess, second guess and third guess estimates on what might be causing it and within a short time am imagining the worst...then panic mode sets in and by the time the horse is feeling normal again I'm an absolute wreck.
I can also never remember which side a horse's mane should be on for English or western...I get them mixed up.
You jump in the saddle,
Hold onto the bridle!
Jump in the line!
...Belefonte 
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:17 PM
#28
Vision and girths have been addressed.. I had such witty answers!
Standard for reins is that the more used, or more necessary, one goes on the inside; less used goes on the outside. Goes for pelhams, gags, draw reins, etc. Basically, you don't want to be cranking on the pelham rein when you just need a little "woah" from your snaffle rein. You can always switch 'em. Doesn't really matter.
Fluffie - ergot and my horse doesn't have them! Is he more evolved?...or has he skipped an evolutionary step? I may never know.
tbtrailrider - scope is totally personal. Tends to refer to height - scope for 3'6 means can do the 3'6, perhaps at the top of its range. A safe rule of thumb is that if the horse clears a jump with effort, that is the limit of its scope (for now.) You can also watch a horse's hind end to determine scope. Watching some high level jumpers, esp grand prix horses, I'm surprised the horses don't flip head over heels with how much SPRING they get from their back end! It's crazy. (This is something I actually only noticed this weekend, watching Marilyn Little & Romeo in Raleigh.)
Umm.. I suck at fitting martingales. And weird bits, like loose rings and pelhams. And eyeballing girth sizes...and knowing when a horse is (subtlely) lame while riding.
The only thing I've learned in college is what I don't want to do with my life.
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:21 PM
#29
I have to hang the headstall over my own head to get a bridle reassembled correctly. Otherwise, something always ends up crooked, backwards, twisted, or upside down.
I can't wrap a tail without the darn thing slipping off. I get so paranoid about wrapping it too tightly. I just use the pre assembled tail wraps for shipping. I find someone else to wrap it when it's braided.
I don't know why boots have swagger tabs. They've never given me a swagger.
And I've never figured out how to get a martingale stop on without using language that would make a sailor blush and frighten small children.
But the big mystery of horse ownership: where the devil are all those hoof picks I've bought over the years? I swear, you could melt down all my lost hoof picks and make an F350 out of them!
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:28 PM
#30
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:32 PM
#31
Despite having polo wrapped a gazillion legs, I still have a tendency to wrap the right ones backwards. In fact, I passed this on to one of my friends who was finally corrected about it when she was on her college polo team. I was a wee bit embarrassed!
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:40 PM
#32
Ergots. Supposed to have been the left overs of when equines were multi toed
Why must I buy a new sweat scrapper for the wash rack every day...only my horses use it!! Do they eat them..use them to ground out the hot wire when they plan big escapes
When should you poltice vs. set up vs. ice vs. pack feet and set up to many choices only 4 legs!!!
"I would not beleive her if her tongue came notorized"
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:41 PM
#33
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:46 PM
#34
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:48 PM
#35
I don't know what it means (or what it feels like) to have my horse "in front of my leg". Um, about half of him is in front of my leg and the other half is in back of my leg, and I thought that was kinda the goal.
I also can't give an aid when a certain foot is in the air, or striking the ground, or beginning to move forward or any of that.
Arrange whatever pieces come your way. - Virginia Woolf
Did you know that if you say the word "GULLIBLE" really softly, it sounds like "ORANGES"?
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:48 PM
#36
 Originally Posted by dogchushu
I have to hang the headstall over my own head to get a bridle reassembled correctly. Otherwise, something always ends up crooked, backwards, twisted, or upside down.
Hey, I used to do that!
I must admit, that after years of riding around in dressage arenas, I can't remember the letters. Oh, I have a way of remembering that the letters are AKEHCMBF, but when I'm riding I can never remember which side of the arena E and B are on, and which diagonal K, H, M, and F are at the end of. (I memorize my dressage tests by which way I turn and whether I do movements in the middle of the arena or end, rather than by letters.) It's a good thing I'll probably never make it past training level.
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Nov. 15, 2006, 11:49 PM
#37
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Nov. 16, 2006, 12:01 AM
#38
Threehorsenight. Starting at A and working counter clockwise
A Fat Black Momma Cat Had Eight Kittens. AFBMCHEK
"I would not beleive her if her tongue came notorized"
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Nov. 16, 2006, 12:02 AM
#39
According to GM, scope is the ability to jump wide fences. Not always used that way tho.
I think I finally got the footfalls for the various gaits down.
Renvers - travers - whatever
While I can place the dressage letters around the ring, I don't really ride off of them, but more by patterns.
Definitely challenged at feeling pulses. Anywhere. And am clueless and feeling for the extra powerful digital pulse that accompanies lameness.
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Nov. 16, 2006, 12:13 AM
#40
 Originally Posted by fargonefarm
2) Why the heck does the elastic part of the girth have to be on the mounting side? Never made much of a difference to me.
It makes no difference. In fact you should alternate which side you girth up on. Its much better for your saddle it you do. Most saddles when viewed upside down down the panels will have asymmetry if they are only girthed up on the left side. Same thing for always mounting on the left- much healthier on the horse's back and saddle to alternate. Thats my PSA.
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