Horse Eden Eventing Game
Horse Eden Eventing Game


Year: 193   Season: Fall   
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Forecast: Breezy and Pleasant
Forecast:
Sun 11:30am  
Stables Online:  115 
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ArcticLights
11:29:54 Ceci / (Call me) AL
And trails/clinics/SD training eventing breeding stock is a very common mistake. You'll be fine :)
LouixVillage
11:26:48 Louix
Will do. Thank you!
ArcticLights
11:25:03 Ceci / (Call me) AL
What you can do with your mare is use the strongest you can afford. If she does amazingly with one, either repeat match or find a boy with similar training and see if she also does well with that one
LouixVillage
11:23:02 Louix
Thank you, AL!! I just got out of the “junior stable” phase but I swear sometimes it feels like I am still only a month in lol
Thank you all so much <3
Looking Glass Stable
11:22:31 IA Glass 👋
Yes, that's correct Louix (:
Still a lovely mare, she can still have some luck in her breedings if matched with strong studs. I think there's some nice WB ones out there too, but not my breed so no clue specific ones lol.
Best of luck! ♡
ArcticLights
11:21:57 Ceci / (Call me) AL
Or retired horses
ArcticLights
11:21:26 Ceci / (Call me) AL
Louix, a general tips: never use breeding stock for trails/clinics. If quests use geldings
LouixVillage
11:21:12 Louix
Okay, well I appreciate it! So is it a good idea to only to trails and clinics with horses you mainly plan to show? That way you can watch the traits accurately for breeding?
ArcticLights
11:20:22 Ceci / (Call me) AL
As Glass says, usually only one trait w3 and after several generations of sven use
Looking Glass Stable
11:19:07 IA Glass 👋
@Lily
No, not then, at least not naturally.
I've owned a few wild WWWs and watched many more, never seen it happen even once lol.
Even the strongest only start at week 4 without boosting
LouixVillage
11:18:52 Louix
Darn. I usually try to leave them alone until I see them move up in something so I can see what they’re weak in. And I’ve never gotten one that’s skills match up with a a specific discipline so I’m always stumped on what to do
Looking Glass Stable
11:18:02 IA Glass 👋
It makes them unmatchable because it messes with the training stats. You get the boosted version, not their innate natural traits anymore.
You won't see an AD horse go up their Week3 except in extremely rare cases of maybe a single trait going up in horses that have been bred with Svens for generations
Circle Star TBs
11:18:01 Lily
AL, she's a wild so wouldn't she go up on her week 3?
LouixVillage
11:17:22 Louix
I guess it makes sense! I’ve never seen any movement in the training bars with the stallion I do trail rides with, even when it’s all + results
ArcticLights
11:16:19 Ceci / (Call me) AL
There is no way she went up 3 on her week 3 so not accurate
Kingswood Elite
11:15:38 ghost
I never knew trails and clinics made horses unmatchable, I've been doing it quite often for a few of mine!
LouixVillage
11:15:02 Louix
It should be accurate up until her week 4
LouixVillage
11:13:49 Louix
I think I’ve put her in 1 trail ride and 2 clinics.. :’) I usually only do it for quests so I haven’t done it a lot thank goodness.
ArcticLights
11:12:32 Ceci / (Call me) AL
That is a big mistake cause it makes horses unmatchable
Looking Glass Stable
11:11:33 IA Glass 👋
Have you been entering her into trail rides or special training?

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ArcticLights
11:29:54 Ceci / (Call me) AL
And trails/clinics/SD training eventing breeding stock is a very common mistake. You'll be fine :)
LouixVillage
11:26:48 Louix
Will do. Thank you!
ArcticLights
11:25:03 Ceci / (Call me) AL
What you can do with your mare is use the strongest you can afford. If she does amazingly with one, either repeat match or find a boy with similar training and see if she also does well with that one
LouixVillage
11:23:02 Louix
Thank you, AL!! I just got out of the “junior stable” phase but I swear sometimes it feels like I am still only a month in lol
Thank you all so much <3
Looking Glass Stable
11:22:31 IA Glass 👋
Yes, that's correct Louix (:
Still a lovely mare, she can still have some luck in her breedings if matched with strong studs. I think there's some nice WB ones out there too, but not my breed so no clue specific ones lol.
Best of luck! ♡
ArcticLights
11:21:57 Ceci / (Call me) AL
Or retired horses
ArcticLights
11:21:26 Ceci / (Call me) AL
Louix, a general tips: never use breeding stock for trails/clinics. If quests use geldings
LouixVillage
11:21:12 Louix
Okay, well I appreciate it! So is it a good idea to only to trails and clinics with horses you mainly plan to show? That way you can watch the traits accurately for breeding?
ArcticLights
11:20:22 Ceci / (Call me) AL
As Glass says, usually only one trait w3 and after several generations of sven use
Looking Glass Stable
11:19:07 IA Glass 👋
@Lily
No, not then, at least not naturally.
I've owned a few wild WWWs and watched many more, never seen it happen even once lol.
Even the strongest only start at week 4 without boosting
LouixVillage
11:18:52 Louix
Darn. I usually try to leave them alone until I see them move up in something so I can see what they’re weak in. And I’ve never gotten one that’s skills match up with a a specific discipline so I’m always stumped on what to do
Looking Glass Stable
11:18:02 IA Glass 👋
It makes them unmatchable because it messes with the training stats. You get the boosted version, not their innate natural traits anymore.
You won't see an AD horse go up their Week3 except in extremely rare cases of maybe a single trait going up in horses that have been bred with Svens for generations
Circle Star TBs
11:18:01 Lily
AL, she's a wild so wouldn't she go up on her week 3?
LouixVillage
11:17:22 Louix
I guess it makes sense! I’ve never seen any movement in the training bars with the stallion I do trail rides with, even when it’s all + results
ArcticLights
11:16:19 Ceci / (Call me) AL
There is no way she went up 3 on her week 3 so not accurate
Kingswood Elite
11:15:38 ghost
I never knew trails and clinics made horses unmatchable, I've been doing it quite often for a few of mine!
LouixVillage
11:15:02 Louix
It should be accurate up until her week 4
LouixVillage
11:13:49 Louix
I think I’ve put her in 1 trail ride and 2 clinics.. :’) I usually only do it for quests so I haven’t done it a lot thank goodness.
ArcticLights
11:12:32 Ceci / (Call me) AL
That is a big mistake cause it makes horses unmatchable
Looking Glass Stable
11:11:33 IA Glass 👋
Have you been entering her into trail rides or special training?

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than 1 day before you can use our chatbox.






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Forums > The Paddock
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vfiowva February 10, 2024 11:02 PM


Amazing Grace Equine
 
Posts: 288
#1178317
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Leave

Edited at February 11, 2024 03:07 PM by Amazing Grace Equine
vfiowva February 10, 2024 11:11 PM


Amazing Grace Equine
 
Posts: 288
#1178318
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His right side is the weaker side, I've already ridden him quite a few times but the other day when I arrived he made a low nicker at me when he saw me, and we lunged and he managed to pick up both of his leads twice, and we had a nice little walk and I walked him over a small cross rail, and then I brushed him, he absolutely loves being brushed, we could do it for hours (we have) and I picked his feet out for the first time and he lets me touch his ears and everything. and then he watched me leave.
I'm thinking of making his color blue he looks so good in it.
He is getting gelded next week, and then in a couple of weeks, we will finally bring him home.
Fun fact: The name Ryder symbolizes strength and leadership
vfiowva February 11, 2024 07:46 AM


FirstLightFarms

Trivia Team
 
Posts: 3858
#1178375
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He's gorgeous, but please don't be riding and jumping a two year old. He has so much growing ahead of him.
vfiowva February 11, 2024 08:13 AM


Amazing Grace Equine
 
Posts: 288
#1178376
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He's almost 3 he'll be 3 in the spring, and quarter horses are pretty much done growing by then, and of course I'm not jumping him yet, that the end goal it to get over a cross rail by the end of the year

FirstLightFarms said:
He's gorgeous, but please don't be riding and jumping a two year old. He has so much growing ahead of him.


vfiowva February 11, 2024 11:06 AM


Lucky Ranch
 
Posts: 10782
#1178420
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FirstLightFarms said:
He's gorgeous, but please don't be riding and jumping a two year old. He has so much growing ahead of him.


This 100%
More and more research is coming out about how many bad long term effects of riding early and especially jumping early will cause
He isnt finished growing and the problems it can and will cause down the line are soo not worth it, Ive seen it first hand
He is absolutely darling though <3
Love his lil face marking
vfiowva February 11, 2024 11:26 AM


KPH Equestrian
 
Posts: 3451
#1178427
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Lucky Ranch said:

FirstLightFarms said:
He's gorgeous, but please don't be riding and jumping a two year old. He has so much growing ahead of him.


This 100%
More and more research is coming out about how many bad long term effects of riding early and especially jumping early will cause
He isnt finished growing and the problems it can and will cause down the line are soo not worth it, Ive seen it first hand
He is absolutely darling though <3
Love his lil face marking


yes. And btw, QHs don't stop growing any quicker than other breeds, they take about 8 years to stop growing entirely(mentally as well), but that's mainly the big flat bones that grow slower. You can cause serious issues by riding and jumping(no matter how small) a young horse, typically only polework is done on them until they're about 4 :)
-
And remember, it's best to not expect him to do any form of jumping this young, I think hoping to do small(8"-12") crossrails near his 4th birthday would be safer. Don't push him too hard this young, you'll regret it later in his life :)

Edited at February 11, 2024 11:28 AM by KPH Equestrian
vfiowva February 11, 2024 11:37 AM


DaisyMeadowEventing
 
Posts: 2794
#1178429
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KPH Equestrian said:

Lucky Ranch said:

FirstLightFarms said:
He's gorgeous, but please don't be riding and jumping a two year old. He has so much growing ahead of him.


This 100%
More and more research is coming out about how many bad long term effects of riding early and especially jumping early will cause
He isnt finished growing and the problems it can and will cause down the line are soo not worth it, Ive seen it first hand
He is absolutely darling though <3
Love his lil face marking


yes. And btw, QHs don't stop growing any quicker than other breeds, they take about 8 years to stop growing entirely(mentally as well), but that's mainly the big flat bones that grow slower. You can cause serious issues by riding and jumping(no matter how small) a young horse, typically only polework is done on them until they're about 4 :)
-
And remember, it's best to not expect him to do any form of jumping this young, I think hoping to do small(8"-12") crossrails near his 4th birthday would be safer. Don't push him too hard this young, you'll regret it later in his life :)


Just was going to say this, my reiner (a QH obviously lol) didn't fully mature in height and body mass until she was 8 or 9. Mentally, she didn't mature until 6.
vfiowva February 11, 2024 11:46 AM


KPH Equestrian
 
Posts: 3451
#1178430
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DaisyMeadowEventing said:

KPH Equestrian said:

Lucky Ranch said:

FirstLightFarms said:
He's gorgeous, but please don't be riding and jumping a two year old. He has so much growing ahead of him.


This 100%
More and more research is coming out about how many bad long term effects of riding early and especially jumping early will cause
He isnt finished growing and the problems it can and will cause down the line are soo not worth it, Ive seen it first hand
He is absolutely darling though <3
Love his lil face marking


yes. And btw, QHs don't stop growing any quicker than other breeds, they take about 8 years to stop growing entirely(mentally as well), but that's mainly the big flat bones that grow slower. You can cause serious issues by riding and jumping(no matter how small) a young horse, typically only polework is done on them until they're about 4 :)
-
And remember, it's best to not expect him to do any form of jumping this young, I think hoping to do small(8"-12") crossrails near his 4th birthday would be safer. Don't push him too hard this young, you'll regret it later in his life :)


Just was going to say this, my reiner (a QH obviously lol) didn't fully mature in height and body mass until she was 8 or 9. Mentally, she didn't mature until 6.


Allowing them to mentally mature before really getting into the nitty-gritty fine-tuning of their training is always important, it's so easy to screw up a horse mentally by expecting too much, too young. It's like giving a 9-year-old high school/college-level work and expecting decent work, it's not fair to them and metally degrading.
vfiowva February 11, 2024 12:15 PM


DaisyMeadowEventing
 
Posts: 2794
#1178438
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KPH Equestrian said:

DaisyMeadowEventing said:

KPH Equestrian said:

Lucky Ranch said:

FirstLightFarms said:
He's gorgeous, but please don't be riding and jumping a two year old. He has so much growing ahead of him.


This 100%
More and more research is coming out about how many bad long term effects of riding early and especially jumping early will cause
He isnt finished growing and the problems it can and will cause down the line are soo not worth it, Ive seen it first hand
He is absolutely darling though <3
Love his lil face marking


yes. And btw, QHs don't stop growing any quicker than other breeds, they take about 8 years to stop growing entirely(mentally as well), but that's mainly the big flat bones that grow slower. You can cause serious issues by riding and jumping(no matter how small) a young horse, typically only polework is done on them until they're about 4 :)
-
And remember, it's best to not expect him to do any form of jumping this young, I think hoping to do small(8"-12") crossrails near his 4th birthday would be safer. Don't push him too hard this young, you'll regret it later in his life :)


Just was going to say this, my reiner (a QH obviously lol) didn't fully mature in height and body mass until she was 8 or 9. Mentally, she didn't mature until 6.


Allowing them to mentally mature before really getting into the nitty-gritty fine-tuning of their training is always important, it's so easy to screw up a horse mentally by expecting too much, too young. It's like giving a 9-year-old high school/college-level work and expecting decent work, it's not fair to them and metally degrading.


Totally agree. I personally wouldn't start mine till around 4. I feel like even after 6 my mare grew more mentally. But 6 is when I saw her change from a baby to an adult mind. She was still imature though and not always confident in herself. This specific mare is now 15 and is super confident and smart. I would say around 10 is where I felt like I could finally push her and finish her training.
vfiowva February 11, 2024 12:30 PM


KPH Equestrian
 
Posts: 3451
#1178440
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DaisyMeadowEventing said:
Totally agree. I personally wouldn't start mine till around 4. I feel like even after 6 my mare grew more mentally. But 6 is when I saw her change from a baby to an adult mind. She was still imature though and not always confident in herself. This specific mare is now 15 and is super confident and smart. I would say around 10 is where I felt like I could finally push her and finish her training.
My mother bought a 2yo Welsh Pony 11 years ago, and due to a lack of time+3 kids, she never got the chance to work with him very much. A few years ago, she asked my to work with him, and if I got him up to pay with the other ponies, she'd get me my own horse. He was very shy, not confident, and overall the nervous but curious sort. Now, he follows me around everywhere like I'm his dam, lets me kiss his nose(he used to not let anyones face near his) and does tricks, like handshakes and fistbumps. While he was started much later in life than anyone would choose to, I strongly believe that letting him grow up helped him, though some horses aren't that way.

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