Horse Eden Eventing Game
Horse Eden Eventing Game


Year: 192   Season: Winter   
$: 0
Forecast: Overcast and Calm
Forecast:
Mon 01:27am  
Stables Online:  59 
Chatbox
SCF Sporting Chance
01:22:22 SCF/Gibbs
Dynasty... The Knot is a good planning source... it has all kinds of info and you can use it as your registry as well.
New Dynasty Stud
01:22:14 
There are HEWGQ shows once a week but your horses need to be in a futurity and level 8-9
New Dynasty Stud
01:20:32 
Dusty
I have trust issues with wedding planners after watching my mom’s experience lol. I’ll probably end up taking ideas from a lot of people and narrowing them down
Calela Eventing
01:19:59 Cali
Can someone explain the HEWG qualifiers? Do you get points for it by normal shows or are there special ones
New Dynasty Stud
01:19:33 
Roan
Love my in-laws don’t like how particular they are… overall they’re amazing and pretty accepting of me though thankfully! It’ll probably be smaller (50-75 people simply because both him and I have large families) so I also have to take into account any allergies since I wanted the wedding to be at my families ranch but many of them are majorly allergic to horses so that idea had to go out the window lol
Lucky Ranch
01:18:44 luhckeigh
my fiances family has driven several of them to mental health crisises already
Savannah Stables
01:18:06 Dusty
I think there are like professional wedding planners who could help
New Dynasty Stud
01:16:26 
Diva
His family is pretty well off along with him so that’s part of the stress because I need to make sure it’ll be something they’d approve of and something I also like
Foal Me Once Farms
01:15:44 Roan🦋⃤
Absolutely!! Don’t forget that you absolutely never have to do anything huge, unless that is something you like!!
I invited only close friends and family, since most of my in-laws are a bit uh.. yeah haha
Mooncreek Magic
01:14:34 Diva's fruits
I ve been married twice now, didn't do too much planning or such, found it quite easy actually. I guess it depends from circumstances and where you live as well
New Dynasty Stud
01:14:06 
Roan
We’re doing it about two and a half years from now (Going for an October wedding) so I’ll be finished with nursing school and my parents will be more accepting since they don’t want me getting married at 18 so I’m trying to take advantage of the time I have! Thank you so so much for the advice since I have no idea what I’m doing
Foal Me Once Farms
01:10:01 Roan🦋⃤
NDS
We planned ours over a lengthy bit of time we never had a set date for the marriage to happen on. I will say though, having some close gal friends and or guy friends that are willing to help, is so very helpful!
New Dynasty Stud
12:57:08 
If there’s any married folk on here how did you plan your wedding? I’m a little clueless and stressed over here lol
MK Sport Horse Yard
12:49:32 
if we want another account do we use the same email?
Blue Diamond
12:45:54 Bluey
Goodnight, everyone! Be back tomorrow! <3
Blue Diamond
12:45:41 Bluey
Ru
Especially with orders
Sagruesal
12:45:07 Ru
Artists are making a piece every several days, that's a tough schedule
Sagruesal
12:44:27 Ru
Good thing I didn't sign up for the rumble, I wouldn't be able to keep up
SCF Sporting Chance
12:26:54 SCF/Gibbs
I have complete an utter faith in all of the artists in this round! Y'all didn't think it was going to get easier did you??
Blue Diamond
12:22:45 Bluey
Good luck, artists! I'm so excited to see reluts!!

You must be a registered member for more
than 1 day before you can use our chatbox.



Rules   Hide
You are in: Main Chat
View Sales Chat
Quests
Horse Eden Eventing Game
Chatbox
SCF Sporting Chance
01:22:22 SCF/Gibbs
Dynasty... The Knot is a good planning source... it has all kinds of info and you can use it as your registry as well.
New Dynasty Stud
01:22:14 
There are HEWGQ shows once a week but your horses need to be in a futurity and level 8-9
New Dynasty Stud
01:20:32 
Dusty
I have trust issues with wedding planners after watching my mom’s experience lol. I’ll probably end up taking ideas from a lot of people and narrowing them down
Calela Eventing
01:19:59 Cali
Can someone explain the HEWG qualifiers? Do you get points for it by normal shows or are there special ones
New Dynasty Stud
01:19:33 
Roan
Love my in-laws don’t like how particular they are… overall they’re amazing and pretty accepting of me though thankfully! It’ll probably be smaller (50-75 people simply because both him and I have large families) so I also have to take into account any allergies since I wanted the wedding to be at my families ranch but many of them are majorly allergic to horses so that idea had to go out the window lol
Lucky Ranch
01:18:44 luhckeigh
my fiances family has driven several of them to mental health crisises already
Savannah Stables
01:18:06 Dusty
I think there are like professional wedding planners who could help
New Dynasty Stud
01:16:26 
Diva
His family is pretty well off along with him so that’s part of the stress because I need to make sure it’ll be something they’d approve of and something I also like
Foal Me Once Farms
01:15:44 Roan🦋⃤
Absolutely!! Don’t forget that you absolutely never have to do anything huge, unless that is something you like!!
I invited only close friends and family, since most of my in-laws are a bit uh.. yeah haha
Mooncreek Magic
01:14:34 Diva's fruits
I ve been married twice now, didn't do too much planning or such, found it quite easy actually. I guess it depends from circumstances and where you live as well
New Dynasty Stud
01:14:06 
Roan
We’re doing it about two and a half years from now (Going for an October wedding) so I’ll be finished with nursing school and my parents will be more accepting since they don’t want me getting married at 18 so I’m trying to take advantage of the time I have! Thank you so so much for the advice since I have no idea what I’m doing
Foal Me Once Farms
01:10:01 Roan🦋⃤
NDS
We planned ours over a lengthy bit of time we never had a set date for the marriage to happen on. I will say though, having some close gal friends and or guy friends that are willing to help, is so very helpful!
New Dynasty Stud
12:57:08 
If there’s any married folk on here how did you plan your wedding? I’m a little clueless and stressed over here lol
MK Sport Horse Yard
12:49:32 
if we want another account do we use the same email?
Blue Diamond
12:45:54 Bluey
Goodnight, everyone! Be back tomorrow! <3
Blue Diamond
12:45:41 Bluey
Ru
Especially with orders
Sagruesal
12:45:07 Ru
Artists are making a piece every several days, that's a tough schedule
Sagruesal
12:44:27 Ru
Good thing I didn't sign up for the rumble, I wouldn't be able to keep up
SCF Sporting Chance
12:26:54 SCF/Gibbs
I have complete an utter faith in all of the artists in this round! Y'all didn't think it was going to get easier did you??
Blue Diamond
12:22:45 Bluey
Good luck, artists! I'm so excited to see reluts!!

You must be a registered member for more
than 1 day before you can use our chatbox.






Refresh


Forums

→ Horse Eden is a fun game! Sign Up Now!

My Subscriptions
My Bookmarks
My Topics
Latest Topics
Following

Forums > The Paddock
   1    2    3    4 

vfiowva February 15, 2024 10:47 AM


ShiningStar Stables
 
Posts: 6843
#1179725
Give Award

4
That all being said, if you know your horse is ready, I don't necessarily think it is a problem to start getting them used to the basics in a way that doesn't hinder their development and growth. With my mare as a two-year-old, she already had a solid start on the ground, I had built a good relationship with her, and above all, she wanted to learn; she would always love trying new things, and she seemed to get bored with all the groundwork (we still did the groundwork, don't worry, lol), so I started just sitting on her in the pasture with a halter and lead rope. I would get her to flex both ways, then neck-rein her both ways, and maybe back a few steps. It was really simple stuff that didn't strain her too much, mentally or physically, but it allowed her to figure out some aspects of riding without messing with her growth.
I didn't actually start riding her until she was like 3.5, and even then, it was, usually, 20–30 minute sessions, part groundwork with like 10-15 minutes of riding, once or twice a month. When she was 4 years old, I started riding her more consistently, but I still paid attention to make sure she wasn't stressed out by it.
As KPH said, just compare them to humans. Each horse is different; some pick things up faster, some slower.
Even if they are eager, I don't start riding them for more than 15 minutes until they are 4 years old, and even then, I try not to push them too hard if they struggle with something since they are still babies. Some horses like a challenge and like to learn; just make sure you aren't doing too much until their bodies can handle it.
Make sure, no matter what, you are listening to what your horse has to say, as that is the most important part of training.
vfiowva March 19, 2024 09:02 PM


ghost light stables
 
Posts: 2216
#1189814
Give Award

ShiningStar Stables said:

ghost light stables said:
ok ima set this here starting a horse a 2 is better than staring at 3 although only walk trot and getting your horse in the bridle no jumping or loping when you start a horse at 3 or 4 there will be worse problems as your starting it 'late' as the horse could be harder to start or even handle on the ground from not being started at a younger age i hope this helps a bit
plus they said they walked over a small crossrail


I don't fully agree with this. As someone who has started a 13-year-old that hasn't had anything done with it, they can be stubborn, but overall, you just have to work at their pace and they will get there.
In my experience, starting a horse later doesn't make it harder as long as you have put some work into the horse on the ground. If you take the time to form a solid bond with the horse and set them up for success with the groundwork, then they will usually be easier to start. If you just throw a foal out at pasture and don't do anything with it until it is 4 and try to pull it up and start it under saddle immediately, it will obviously be harder.

Hopefully, that made sense and came out right. Its 3 a.m. here, and my brain is mostly fried lol

i get what your putting down as ive also started older horses but i also forgot to put in that starting horses at two helps there growth a lot better and it helps them get stronger
vfiowva March 24, 2024 07:25 PM


ShowJumpingChampions
 
Posts: 342
#1191486
Give Award
I agree that starting a horse too young can be damaging to both their mental and physical health, but I have also seen for myself that with the right training a horse who was started young can do very well. I know an 8 year old girl who can handle and ride a 5 year old horse extremely well by herself. They were beginning to learn rollbacks and travers and other more advanced moves. Again, this was with private training which I know can be very expensive and is not for everyone. And this is one horse, every horse is different and progresses at different rates. Please don't take this post the wrong way. I'm not trying to attack or criticize, I'm just giving my experience so it can be used if deemed helpful.
vfiowva March 24, 2024 09:04 PM


FirstLightFarms

Trivia Team
 
Posts: 3842
#1191508
Give Award
This isn't about progress or how well the horse is doing now, it's about longevity of the horse. Breaking them too young leads to problems years down the road, but unfortunately we're too used to immediate gratification these days so these consequences don't become apparent until too late
vfiowva March 24, 2024 09:51 PM


KPH Equestrian
 
Posts: 3326
#1191525
Give Award

FirstLightFarms said:
This isn't about progress or how well the horse is doing now, it's about longevity of the horse. Breaking them too young leads to problems years down the road, but unfortunately we're too used to immediate gratification these days so these consequences don't become apparent until too late


this^^
vfiowva March 25, 2024 09:14 AM


ShowJumpingChampions
 
Posts: 342
#1191612
Give Award
I understand that, but this also circles back to the fact that rushing a horse's training and pushing them to progress faster than they're ready for can affect a horse's longevity. Doing certain things too early can be extremely damaging to the horse, but there are also things that are okay to start early. 2 years seems very young to start a lot of riding but basic things may be okay to do periodically. If it were me, the most I would be doing is lunging and working on things we can do from the ground unless told otherwise by a credible trainer. The people I mentioned before started their horse at three years and were working with world-class gaited horse trainers to develop him the right way. Jennifer and Larry have a lot of experience training horses and do anything they can that will help improve the horse's quality of life. They have immense knowledge of the horse's body and how it works and have seen many issues in horses. I'm not trying to be biased or unfair, I'm not trying to tell you that other trainers do it wrong, all I want to share is what has worked for me and my horses. If you don't agree, that's fine, but if other people think this is helpful, it's there for them.
vfiowva March 25, 2024 04:58 PM


ShowJumpingChampions
 
Posts: 342
#1191733
Give Award

ShiningStar Stables said:
That all being said, if you know your horse is ready, I don't necessarily think it is a problem to start getting them used to the basics in a way that doesn't hinder their development and growth. With my mare as a two-year-old, she already had a solid start on the ground, I had built a good relationship with her, and above all, she wanted to learn; she would always love trying new things, and she seemed to get bored with all the groundwork (we still did the groundwork, don't worry, lol), so I started just sitting on her in the pasture with a halter and lead rope. I would get her to flex both ways, then neck-rein her both ways, and maybe back a few steps. It was really simple stuff that didn't strain her too much, mentally or physically, but it allowed her to figure out some aspects of riding without messing with her growth.
I didn't actually start riding her until she was like 3.5, and even then, it was, usually, 20–30 minute sessions, part groundwork with like 10-15 minutes of riding, once or twice a month. When she was 4 years old, I started riding her more consistently, but I still paid attention to make sure she wasn't stressed out by it.
As KPH said, just compare them to humans. Each horse is different; some pick things up faster, some slower.
Even if they are eager, I don't start riding them for more than 15 minutes until they are 4 years old, and even then, I try not to push them too hard if they struggle with something since they are still babies. Some horses like a challenge and like to learn; just make sure you aren't doing too much until their bodies can handle it.
Make sure, no matter what, you are listening to what your horse has to say, as that is the most important part of training.


This is pretty much what I'm trying to say.

Forums > The Paddock
   1    2    3    4 

Refresh