Is this saddle pressure?
I'm 15 years old, and yesterday I rode another pony because my pony injured its leg. I immediately noticed that she tries to bite the area where you put the saddle on. Otherwise, she's really sweet. My riding instructor also warned me to be careful because she tries to bite or snap when you tighten the girth. She doesn't do it with the riding instructors—not really biting—because that gets her into trouble. With other riding students, she really bites, so much so that it really hurts, because she knows that if you do, you'll be afraid of her and won't want to ride her anymore.
So is it saddle pressure or not?
rather a lean or back problem or not suitable equipment. the symptom of such things is in the fact sattelzwang.
you make it easier and slightly less unpleasant for the horse if you rebel a hole on the right and left. only in this way is belted uniformly and the saddle is straight without delay. always tighten evenly, never tighten the belt.
to make your own safety-willing horse either shorten or let it go further so that it doesn’t get so far around with the head that it can bite.
the teacher is in the duty to remedy. the horse must be clarified health and equipment by the sattler.
sometimes the horse is also just kitteny.
Puffy? Yeah, could be that would also explain why she’s trying to grab the fingers.
Yeah, sure.
Maybe.
Does she or not?
Whether this is now, “real” saddle and or belt compulsion is actually not important for the first time. The animal has nothing to look for in school. It must be clarified whether the animal has a medical background that leads the animal to bite or just a “unart”.
But both must be dismissed.
If a medical background is spring-leading behind the bite, a use of animal protection is not to be answered. In a “unart” it is not to be answered “only” to the students.
In short, the use of the animal is in this state, neither to encourage the pupils nor the animal, just a mess!
I would recommend to the parents of the whip students to change the riding school immediately or to sue the operation to negligent bodily injury!
So with the riding instructors, it’s more of a playful bite.
… yes, because they know to defend themselves or have a different appearance.
However, whoever gets “playful bites” unfortunately does not have much expertise.
It’s saddle-forced.
And it is animal cruelty to continue riding this animal as long as this problem is not out of the world.
Oh, thank you for the answer you just have to say it to the stud, because it certainly has bitten some 😔
You’re riding on a “guest”?
Then say it.
The less you should support this.
I think people there know the problem of this mare
Then, in God’s name, stop by chatting a 4-eye appointment with “the woman” and talk to her.
The solution can be simple:
The fact that the riding teacher, who knows the Beiß-thema, does not seem to take seriously, that this horse satels itself, etc., and the whipmen only rise/down.
A woman is responsible for this, but I don’t know them personally about the chat
Apparently, because the pony is otherwise sweet, you just have to be careful with saddles and cleaning, because if you don’t fit in the hand you bite them.
Interesting combination… breeding and riding lessons… but who is now responsible for riding lessons and school horses?
The riding teacher seems to know the problem… she just accepts it and doesn’t talk to her employer?
Exactly
Name it as you want, in any case this is not a horse that the whipmen should saddle themselves/self.
If completion is yours, the animal is simply not suitable as a school horse.
… and I can’t imagine that a well-managed operation is taking the risk that whip pupils will be seriously injured or bitten. This means that they would clearly violate their care requirements and can come “in devil’s kitchen”.
Yes, completion is done by the whipmen themselves. I think it is used there in school, because otherwise it is really nice to just bite and snap on saddles and cleaning is a problem. Even with me, she tried to bite me with her teeth when I wanted to brush them. She had probably bite other whipmen since my riding instructor said that the pony did it more often and then the whipmen no longer wanted to ride on them because they were afraid.
And no one has come to the closest solution?
(see my other answer)