Comments: 49
Black-Stallion-Fan [2016-07-22 08:47:10 +0000 UTC]
This is truly amazing, I absolutely adore your art style and pictures!
Keep up up the fantastic work!
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learea777 [2013-07-31 20:53:12 +0000 UTC]
That's wonderful!very very nice!!
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MissDudette [2013-01-16 05:17:20 +0000 UTC]
Kiwi says, OHEMGEE GET IT OFFFFF!
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Secret-Assasin-Emery [2012-11-25 22:30:58 +0000 UTC]
What a fun pose! Kiwi doesn't look too happy about that saddle though xD
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ElreniaGreenleaf [2012-11-25 17:48:42 +0000 UTC]
If I'd known you'd wanted refs of bucking horses with saddles I could have lent you some of my friend's old horse Cruz!
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Tattered-Dreams In reply to ElreniaGreenleaf [2012-11-26 00:14:06 +0000 UTC]
A friend of mine had an ex racehorse mare; beautiful with amazing paces - on the rare occasion she actually went forward and not *up*. She could buck for the Olympics.
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Tattered-Dreams In reply to ElreniaGreenleaf [2012-11-26 01:20:46 +0000 UTC]
Definitely sounds like a chestnut mare
Sorry to hear about that, though. My friend's horse, Genie, was worse in some ways. She started off as an amazing horse - great considering her racing background, but gradually she deteriorated until you literally didn't have time to sit in the saddle before she was launching upwards, all four hooves at once. But she was still like a lamb to interact with from the ground. I helped her where I could and we tried everything; we checked her bit, her feet, her bridle fit, her saddle, her back...she had all sorts of tests done, we tried working her less than usual, then more than usual, and then resting her and restarting much more gradually; we lunged her to build up possible weak muscle over her back and had tons of vet and chiropractor opinions. As far as any of us could tell, there was nothing physically wrong whatsoever (though bone development problems were a concern because she'd been raced at 2yrs). We thought it was some kind of psyhcological thing she had. But she was wasted while she couldn't be worked, so after some time off, my friend moved her, to see if a new place would help. When that failed, she sold her, but she was sold back because she was pining as well as going nuts.
In the end, she couldn't afford to keep her and she wouldn't be sold, so they had to put her down. She was seven. My friend and her mum who'd had her for years and watched her fall apart were just as angry at her as they were upset because it was like Genie didn't realise the situation she was making for herself...
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Tattered-Dreams In reply to ElreniaGreenleaf [2012-11-27 00:08:12 +0000 UTC]
Eeee, I love that! Epic expression, and she's just so pretty ^^ I have to ask - can I use it as a ref/inspiration for a HARPG picture? Either Poe or Kiwi, I think
A fair few horses I've ridden sound like her. One I really loved in fact (Blue) tested you in the same way - he'd be a complete twit when you got on him - hollowing his back, throwing his head, darting side ways and generally napping and refusing to settle. If you rode quietly and sympathetically which tends to be how I ride naturally, he just quiets down himself and we really clicked. But some people would wind him right up until he'd just throw bucks for fun and unseat people. Some horses you can sit to and Blue wasn't too bad. The problem with Genie was you couldn't even work her through it slowly - she had such high, spine wrenching leaps you just couldn't sit them at all. My friend tried, I tried and my friend's boyfriend at the time was known at college for sticking to the nutters, but even he came off.
With Cruz, I get why that unknown is such a scary thought. The best you can do is look on the bright side and hope that somewhere along the line, she was passed to someone who rode her in a way she respected and she's happier. That is the good thing about letting different people get on a horse; there's more chance you'll stumble on someone who can click with them.
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Tattered-Dreams In reply to ElreniaGreenleaf [2012-11-27 01:06:19 +0000 UTC]
Thank you!
Exactly that. I literally walked into the barn on Sunday yards years ago and just had to lay eyes on Sai, a chestnut Arabian gelding, to know I wanted to keep him. Nothing got me down and when I finally got to ride him, he was scatty and a complete fruitcake who spooked at his own shadow, but I just loved him more. With Blue, I used to be fond of him and then I wasn't around him for months, during which time he reportedly went 'nuts' and was now 'temperamental' and 'unpredictable'. I was a little nervous to get on him again, but as soon as I did and he darted side ways just like Sai, my nerves vanished and I knew everyone was talking rubbish - he was just playfull and fussy and wanted someone on him who wouldn't hang onto his mouth.
There's a horse at my local stable though, Barney, who has thrown me off four times. I'm the only one he prats about with - for everyone else he's very sweet (a tad stubborn, but not loopy). In the end, I think we just don't click and he likes to be ridden in a different way than I naturally do so I stopped pushing myself on him.
I think its brilliant that you had such a turnaround with Cruz, though! To go from freaked at watching her to willingly hopping on her bareback is just great ^^
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Tattered-Dreams In reply to ElreniaGreenleaf [2012-11-27 21:52:46 +0000 UTC]
That's really true, sadly.
I haven't done much bareback riding, either. A chestnut Arabian called Asti was hand reared, so he has no idea what field heirarchy is and will get really worked up with another horse nearby. I rode him with a pad and though he shot sideways now and then with pinned ears and nose in the air, he was mostly very sweet and easy to move with. But years before that, I rode a friend's quarter horse gelding completely bareback. My friend shared him, and his proper owner didn't want him ridden in english tack, so he just had a huge western saddle. We tried bareback to take the weight off because it was really warm, the school surface was deep and he was light boned and young. But he was so supple and loose through his back without the saddle that I almost rolled right off several times just turning him on a circle XD.
Lol, those pictures are great! I love the differences they show in her. And I wouldn't say its odd - there are so many factors involved. Where they say humans have five senses (and the debated 'sixth sense') it is said that horses have over 70; monitoring pheremones in the air, for instance. Its entirely possible that Cruz acted 'dangerous' around most people, not because they were afraid, but because they were determined, felt challenged or thrilled when working with her and she's actually a very sweet horse who - when she sensed real fear - wanted to help, rather than take advantage.
I've had some nasty falls and interactions (not broken anything yet *touchwood*) but it seems to be that I only get nervous in certain situations. I was terrified jumping higher than 2ft on the resident superstar pony at college, and though I don't like high fences anywhere, I really love schooling the difficult ones over jumps when I'm not on the college yard. One of the school ponies everyone labelled 'nuts' - she had no brakes but other than that, was safe as houses - no bucking, rearing, napping or darting sideways... she just didn't like stopping. Everyone would have a war with her in lessons, but I used to get on fine with her because everytime she tanked, I let the reins slip. She had nothing to lean on and she'd stop on a dollar, but no one believed me when I told them to let their reins go. She hit a stride wrong to an oxer one day (at my stable, not college) and sent me into the whole fence, taking it almost completely out. I got back on and it never even occured to me to be nervous of her after that. At college, I had to jump a green horse over a tiny cross pole. She overcompensated and leapt the height of the wings, sending me right off. My tutor made me get back on, but even though she calmed after that and started to take the fence really nicely, I didn't stop shaking.
In short, nervousness and fear manifests in many ways, and a horse can usually tell in all cases. How they respond to that fear depends on that horse's core personality - some take advantage of real fear, some take liberties with slight nerves (like cheeky kids ponies) and some horses are so honest that they just want to help you through it. To me, it sounds like Cruz was a very honest mare under it all, and liked to give as good as she got when someone challenged her, but when it counted, she knew what you needed.
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Tattered-Dreams In reply to ElreniaGreenleaf [2012-12-01 16:09:19 +0000 UTC]
Sorry to take an age!
The quarter horse had a fairly prominent wither, but nothing drastic, thankfully XD. I did ride a TB cross with a saddle, and he had such a sharp wither that it was uncomortable even with stirrups! I'm glad I never tried without I can only imagine how awful that dismount was
I love it when you see that happen! A little horse that everyone calls nuts just put a smile on a timid rider's face. The pony I mentioned before with no brakes was called Mischief, and she was one of the early ones to do that for me. Everyone told me she was bonkers, but the minute I sat on her I knew they were the ones who were nuts - she wasn't mad, she was just forward and loved to run. I was told a long time ago something I like a lot: "There's two types of horses in the world. The ones you can't start, and the ones you can't stop." Most people prefer one or the other. I prefer the latter Mischief was that to a T. I never felt afraid and she did so much for my confidence and position. Whenever I see someone else wear that delighted expression, I love it because I remember feeling like that (and its nostalgic, because Missy was put down a couple of years back )
And that's exactly what I mean! Some horses do the slightest thing and your trust is shattered. others get away with murder and you never feel like they're something to fear. It is all about you and the horse. (but I get that bit about tanking in trot! We had an Ardenne mare come to college - she was like an elephant disguised as a horse - and she was hilarious every time she tried to bolt off in trot (because canter was an effort XD)).
Aww; I feel awesome that I got her right . And I sympathise. The only horse I ever really, really wanted to keep I haven't seen for years. I'd give a lot just to know how he's doing now...
Those videos are great! She's got such a kick to her, and an adorable cheek, but you can see there isn't a malicious bone in her body. And its great to see the connection she has with you, too. She's a nice mover and she goes so sweetly, she just seems to carry herself long and low. A horse I've ridden recently is like that; he just gets longer and longer the more you work and starts to disconnect, but he's a beautiful mover when you gather him together. Cruz looks like one of those mares who never come from anything special - names, blood or breeding - but they don't need any of that to become special in their own right. Those are the best horses ^^
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ElreniaGreenleaf In reply to Tattered-Dreams [2012-12-01 20:48:23 +0000 UTC]
Ouch! I used to ride this massive big horse called Charlie who had such a big trot it felt like you stayed in the air for an extra stride every time you rose. XD
"There's two types of horses in the world. The ones you can't start, and the ones you can't stop." - I prefer the former, lol. XD
Aww!
This was the trotting one - nice horse but I was really out of practice as I hadn't ridden in like half a year but the yard had a really bad vibe to it and the instructor spent half her time talking to someone outside the arena and getting frustrated when I couldn't slow my pony down! I think she was a welsh cob or at least a partbred because she had this incredibly high stepping gait which was really hard to slow down. She was SUCH a follower too and every time Deb went into canter I was really struggling to hold her back and didn't manage it at one point because she just took off with me. :/
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My confidence wasn't helped by the fact that she kept doing this every few strides either... ¬¬
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lol, elephant horse! XD
That's the worst part - the not knowing. Even if it's bad news I'd want to know. I still cling to the thought that she's found a good person who loves her and appreciates all her little quirks and takes her jumping and gallops her and laughs when she pulls faces at people but in my heart of hearts I have a horrible feeling that she's not even alive anymore and that upsets me more than anything.
Haha, a kick is exactly what she has! XD
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Yeah, her dam was a TBx called Witch, lol but her sire was this gorgeous big hunk of a thing. [link] You can see she inherited his head! (and, according to anyone who's handled his offspring, his awkward temperament, lol)
Oh this has nothing to do with anything but omg, it's adorable. XD
[link]
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Tattered-Dreams In reply to ElreniaGreenleaf [2012-12-11 11:26:52 +0000 UTC]
Eek, finally replying! Sorry this took forever!
Charlie sounds like a blast XD My friend's horse, Diablo - [link] - has what we call a 'sewing machine trot'. He pegs it, with tiny strides and its so difficult to sit to!
That's what I like about that quote - most people can fit in one or the other XD And yeah - it was kinda sad. Missy never kept weight on too well (we think she had some TB in her) and as she got older, she started to fare the winters worse, so it was nicer to put her to sleep before the weather turned a few years back.
In that video it looks like Montana spends a lot of time unsettled in the head and seeking a contact. A mare I've been riding recently does something similar and I really have to connect her hindquarters, but once she steps under, she moves into the bridle much nicer and she settles down a lot. I didn't know nearly as much back in college, though, when I rode an Arabxwelsh cross who moved very much like Montana, along with the follower mentality. I got tanked with a few times - that pony felt like she was on acid every time you sat in the saddle and I felt really powerless with her for months.
I feel your pain
Lol, I love that name for a horse - Witch And that is a handsome stally! you can definitely see some of his lines in her - along with the head XD
And that video is very cute
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Tattered-Dreams In reply to ElreniaGreenleaf [2012-12-24 01:20:51 +0000 UTC]
That is sad - the other thing that can cause that is worms (taking up all the nutrients so the horse wastes away, but that's usually accompanied by bloating, I think...). Still, I sympathise with her, because it is hard to accept having to euthanise a horse you love so much. Sometimes people sit in denial until the very last minute possible because they can't face the alternative. In some ways, I'm really glad that I never owned Missy, and the choice was never mine, because I may have tried to hold onto her a bit longer.
The really sad thing with her was that blue chip was working wonders. She had it all through one winter and she regained weight, condition and felt really young again, but it cost too much for the riding school, so the owner refused to buy it the following winter. That's when it became clear she was relying on it to survive. That just makes me think she could have lived longer, if only they'd had the money.
Haha, if you haven't known one like that, you're missing out
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Tattered-Dreams In reply to ElreniaGreenleaf [2012-12-24 01:48:05 +0000 UTC]
That does make it a bit worse. I can understand wanting to hold on if you spent all the time you could with him, but it wasn't fair if she was hardly there, just to leave him in his box.
And yeah, Blue Chip really seems to work; I've known a few horses fed on the stuff. I'd love to know what they put in there XD
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oakhollowd In reply to Tattered-Dreams [2012-11-25 17:33:05 +0000 UTC]
I draw on rubbishy refill paper so I think that's about the same thing. It's strange how different it feels, though!
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Tattered-Dreams In reply to oakhollowd [2012-11-25 17:44:51 +0000 UTC]
Oh, definitely! I keep saying I hate trying to draw and shade on this thick paper, but I still can't stop doing it XD Just takes getting used to, I guess ^^
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Madalyion [2012-11-25 14:17:07 +0000 UTC]
She's so cuuute <33
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Mustang-mad [2012-11-25 13:42:44 +0000 UTC]
i love this kiwi looks like " what is that on my back omg get it off"
its a brilliant pic
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