Introductions here please!

Hello everyone!
I grew up riding and worked training horses in my early twenties( I rode english, western, dressage, jumping, trail riding, and sidesaddle) but then due to life circumstances I had to sell my horses and now I'm a middle aged and haven't ridden in 12 years. I've had RA now for 21 years and am determined to start riding again but I know it's going to be challenging getting started again. Currently I'm researching as much as I can about how to make riding more doable/comfortable for people with arthritis and it's giving me hope that I have a good chance of being able to ride again in some form or another.
 
I've been lurking for a few months now and I've learned a lot so far, but it's finally time to say hello to everyone. I'm retired and only began my lessons just a couple of months ago. At 69 I must be the oldest new student here! At this point in my life I know I'll never become more than an intermediate rider, but my goal is to be able to confidently walk, trot and canter in an arena and be able to do some trail riding, or hacking as it's called here :) (I'm in California).
Welcome :)
 
I've been lurking for a few months now and I've learned a lot so far, but it's finally time to say hello to everyone. I'm retired and only began my lessons just a couple of months ago. At 69 I must be the oldest new student here! At this point in my life I know I'll never become more than an intermediate rider, but my goal is to be able to confidently walk, trot and canter in an arena and be able to do some trail riding, or hacking as it's called here :) (I'm in California).
Well done, I am 67 so there are us oldies out there riding, i know someone who was hunting side saddle in her 70s. Good luck with your new project and enjoy yourself.
 
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Hello everyone!
I grew up riding and worked training horses in my early twenties( I rode english, western, dressage, jumping, trail riding, and sidesaddle) but then due to life circumstances I had to sell my horses and now I'm a middle aged and haven't ridden in 12 years. I've had RA now for 21 years and am determined to start riding again but I know it's going to be challenging getting started again. Currently I'm researching as much as I can about how to make riding more doable/comfortable for people with arthritis and it's giving me hope that I have a good chance of being able to ride again in some form or another.
I had a 10 year and then an 8 year gap when i restarted riding age 58. Have chronic arthritis in neck, shoulder, knee, feet and occasionally it has a go at my hands. It's a nuisance but i find the wide USA western stirrups are great. They are very comfortable and stable. I have used them for years and they really help me as the cushion the movement and jolting.

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I think 69 is the oldest I have heard of for starting to ride. But unless you have some way of doing balance exercises, I would forget exercising in preparation. Just go to a riding school or trecking centre and have someone sit you on a horse and lead you round in walk.
A short half hour lesson twice a week is better than overdoing it.
I am still riding 23 years after starting and find that the mounting and dismounting are more of a problem than the actual riding. It is easier if there is a disabled mounting block which stands at stirrup height. Our RI has one but the yard where I share does not.
 
Thank you for the suggestion! I've been looking around for some kind of wide flat stirrup like the ones you mentioned. I am hoping to find a pair that also has a cage built on. The RA in my feet is really bad and I can not wear heels of any kind so I will be riding in very wide, flat soled shoes. So far I haven't found anything. Maybe a saddler could attach some kind of cover for me.
I had a 10 year and then an 8 year gap when i restarted riding age 58. Have chronic arthritis in neck, shoulder, knee, feet and occasionally it has a go at my hands. It's a nuisance but i find the wide USA western stirrups are great. They are very comfortable and stable. I have used them for years and they really help me as the cushion the movement and jolting.

View attachment 120683
 
Thank you for the suggestion! I've been looking around for some kind of wide flat stirrup like the ones you mentioned. I am hoping to find a pair that also has a cage built on. The RA in my feet is really bad and I can not wear heels of any kind so I will be riding in very wide, flat soled shoes. So far I haven't found anything. Maybe a saddler could attach some kind of cover for me.
1702279350908.png
 
I think 69 is the oldest I have heard of for starting to ride. But unless you have some way of doing balance exercises, I would forget exercising in preparation. Just go to a riding school or trecking centre and have someone sit you on a horse and lead you round in walk.
A short half hour lesson twice a week is better than overdoing it.
I am still riding 23 years after starting and find that the mounting and dismounting are more of a problem than the actual riding. It is easier if there is a disabled mounting block which stands at stirrup height. Our RI has one but the yard where I share does not.
Everywhere I've ridden so far uses mounting blocks. I'm told not so much for the riders, but for the horses sake (maybe that's to make us old farts feel better). I'm in (relatively) good shape for my age (currently 1218 miles on my Onewheel), but my right leg was scrapping the top of the cantle pretty badly when I dismounted until I started some stretching exercises. :)
 
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I came to getting bitten by the horse bug through quite an atypical route. I am based in London, but my family stems from the East Midlands - proper Quorn Country to be precise, & I'll deftly defend the hunt from all who dare speak ill of it - ancestors were horse breeders on my maternal side, so an early memory of mine from when I was 4 hails from a family tradition that the first-born always gets an introductory riding lesson whether they ask for it or not, & a man isn't really a man until he's had a son who's sat in the saddle. It didn't really go anywhere from there - equestrianism was a girls' pastime where I was growing up, although I never really understood why.

Fast-forward a decade & a half, & as a bored teenager I decide to take up trainspotting, but I soon give up as don't find it challenging enough - it's always the same few EMUs passing by my house, so I reinvent it by finding a list of the names of police horses that the Daily Telegraph had published a couple of years prior, printing it out, putting it on a clipboard & going up to mounted police officers to ask the names of their mounts. I even do some research: cover-to-cover reading of Horseback Riding for Dummies to familiarise myself with what they do, although I can't observe what they're doing because Mounted are so subtle, & it only results in me adopting such americanisms as "hunt seat". This nevertheless blossoms into the source of the majority of my friendships to date (or it feels more like one big friendship in a sense I can only liken to the Holy Trinity - one friend in a couple dozen persons). Last year, after 5 years knowing them, they persuaded me that I was ready to take the reins up myself: in my own words "it seems to me that there are two types of bad rider - those who lack confidence & those who lack patience - and I dare say I don't think I'm one of either".

The second reason I enrolled in a riding school in April last year was because I have come to correlate the late decline in the quality of leadership western civilisation enjoys with the end of it being necessary for anyone seeking positions of leadership to also be an equestrian. Horses teach the rider, among other things, the difference between punishment & revenge and that between work & drudgery. I wanted to test my hypothesis, & so far I have not come across any reason to doubt my view. Horses are great teachers of leadership because they live as though the world were still dangerous.

The atypical beginnings of my equestrian career mean that I am accustomed to most of the things that stereotypically faze new riders, like being around big horses & the fear of falling off (the police have an elegant solution to that: they tell you that everyone falls off eventually & to stop worrying about the inevitable. I will forever regard myself as a novice until the day I first fall off). On the other hand, I can't bear a lot of yard gossip culture, particularly those who think they always know best: y'know, when people talk of accidents in which a helmet did nothing to protect them, or in which they weren't wearing a helmet but were fine, they're not giving reasons why they don't wear a helmet, what they're actually doing is getting defensive because you're berating them over something which ultimately doesn't affect you. It has nothing to do with you whether somebody else wears a helmet or not, so it's not worth bitching each-other about. For reference, I wear a helmet. I see the actors on TV & would like to let my hair out like they do, but I also know that they probably practise with helmets, so I would like to gain more experience first. My first fall seems like a reasonable minimum benchmark, then I'll see how I take it from there.

I am also a fan of fellow East Midlander the jouster Jason Kingsley CBE (in-case you haven't heard, he got promoted last month) & would one day like to try out a lot of the unconventional stuff he does in the saddle. As for big horses, I've quickly reached the shouting "I've ridden bigger horses than that" stage of my career that pony clubbers get to when they're about 10 or so. I look good on big horses too, but I won't complain about riding a pony because to ride is a privilege; it won't do good to begrudge this horse because I'd rather be on that.

Anyway, that's 1½ hours I've just spent trying to note down & explain all the ways in which my relationship with horses is unconventional, & I've barely scratched the surface.
 
Horses teach the rider, among other things, the difference between punishment & revenge
Please read up on the difference between positive and negative reinforcement. There are SO so many good things from the past that don't get enough use any more but punishment is not one of them. Not just a matter of how "soft" you are, it actually doesn't work.
For reference, I wear a helmet. I see the actors on TV & would like to let my hair out like they do, but I also know that they probably practise with helmets, so I would like to gain more experience first. My first fall seems like a reasonable minimum benchmark, then I'll see how I take it from there.
Never ride without a helmet however good at it you get. Brain damage or death are never a cool look. I remember when people were saying "my grandad smoked 40 a day & lived to be 90 so cigarettes can't be bad for you". There is clear evidence that hats are a good idea. You only have one head. Please don't experiment with it!
Anyway, that's 1½ hours I've just spent trying to note down & explain all the ways in which my relationship with horses is unconventional, & I've barely scratched the surface.
Welcome to the forum. To be unconventional is a marvellous thing. Without unconventional people we would still be living in caves, eating elk!
Hope you stick around & get to know us. 😁
 
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As for big horses, I've quickly reached the shouting "I've ridden bigger horses than that" stage of my career that pony clubbers get to when they're about 10 or so.
For me the size barely registers, apart from people looking down their noses at my 13'3 new forest - until he left them for dead in the 3ft jumping class. Although maybe that's not true - I've always gone for ponies, so I suppose it does register.
 
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