This happens to every rider. The horse rears up, and you're thrown to the ground. It hurts. It's embarrassing. Sometimes it's scary. Why do horses throw off riders? It's not anger. It's communication, fear, or pain. We tell you about the reasons and how to avoid them.
Improperly fitted saddle presses on the withers, rubs the back. The horse tries to get rid of the source of pain. A sharp bit can hurt the corners of the lips. A sudden movement with the rein — the horse tosses its head, rears up. Unclean hooves: a stone causes pain when walking, the horse limps, may fall. Illness (colic, arthritis). The horse panics.
What to do: check the equipment before each ride, clean the hooves regularly, take the horse to the vet.
Horses are prey animals. Their instinct is: see danger — run. If a horse is scared (noise, sudden movement, a bag, a fleeting shadow), it may pull to the side, rear up, throw off the rider. A rider who is also scared and pulls on the rein only strengthens the fear. The horse thinks: 'There's something scary, and they're holding me — I need to get free.'
What to do: teach the horse to cope with fear (gradual acclimatization). Don't panic yourself.
The rider beats the horse with spurs (harder than necessary). The horse tries to get rid of the pain. Pulls on the rein — the horse raises its head, may rear up. Pulls on one rein — the horse tosses its head. Doesn't feel the rhythm (jumps out of sync) — the horse stumbles. Sits down too sharply — it hurts the back.
What to do: learn from a trainer how to work softly. Don't use spurs until you master the basics.
A green, unbroken horse (young, untrained) may not understand the commands. An experienced horse, but mean (spoiled by previous riders). A horse-machine that has been pushed (tired, hurt, wants a rest). A dominant horse (tests who is the leader). If the rider is unsure, it starts to dominate.
What to do: choose a horse that suits your level. Don't buy a 'cool stallion' for a beginner.
Noisy sound (salute, gunshot, dog barking). Insect (a Gadfly bit — the horse flinched). Sudden appearance of another animal (a dog under the feet). Bad weather (thunderstorm, hail). Rough road (root, hole).
What to do: avoid potentially dangerous places. Inspect the arena before sitting down.
Learn from a good trainer. Don't overestimate your abilities. Regularly check the horse's health. Use high-quality equipment. Don't take someone else's horse without supervision. Learn to fall (grouping, roll). And remember: a horse doesn't seek revenge. It's just scared or in pain.
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