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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!spool.mu.edu!agate!doc.ic.ac.uk!citycs!city!KingsX!sb380
- From: sb380@city.ac.uk (HOLT A D)
- Newsgroups: rec.equestrian
- Subject: Re: Dressage bitting
- Message-ID: <sb380.721905187@KingsX>
- Date: 16 Nov 92 09:13:07 GMT
- References: <1992Nov12.171830.27787@cbfsb.cb.att.com> <1992Nov13.181657.13026@informix.com> <1e1623INNl96@rave.larc.nasa.gov>
- Sender: news@city.ac.uk (Unix Network News)
- Organization: The City University
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- Nntp-Posting-Host: kingsx
-
- The choice of type of bridle has tended to follow fashions in certain ways.
- Old books (1930s) tend to say something like
- [imagine this spoken by an old-fashioned English colonel]
- "All horses ought to be ridden in a double bridle, except that a snaffle
- is used for training a young horse. A Pelham is a compromise that shouldn't
- work but is sometimes necessary - and we don't talk about hackamores."
-
- The modern (BHS) position is something like
- [imagine exactly the same accent]
- "All horses ought to be ridden in a snaffle, except that a double bridle is
- used for some showing classes, higher level dressage, and by those who wish
- to be 'correctly equipped' when hunting. A Pelham is a compromise that shouldn't
- work but is sometimes necessary - and we don't talk about hackamores."
-
-
- Where I ride, about 2/3 of riding school horses are used in a snaffle, most
- of the rest in a Pelham (or Kimblewick) and a few in a Hackamore. A double
- only being used when needed for specific training of horse or rider.
- Sometimes, a horse that uses a snaffle in an indoor school or a manege is
- put into a Pelham when ridden out (to give "better brakes").
- In the BHS dressage rules, a snaffle is compulsory below "Elementary" level,
- a double above, and either permissable at that level. Pelhams and hackamores
- never permitted for official dressage competitions.
-
- The manner of holding the reins of a double bridle seems to be one of the
- few things in riding that "experts" agree that there is more than one
- "correct" way to do [for other activities "their" way is correct - and
- every one elses is wrong!]. There are three established methods:
- 2 reins in each hand - curb above snaffle
- 2 reins in each hand - snaffle above curb
- 3 reins in left hand, 1 in right (I'm not sure which gets separated -
- I think it is the snaffle) This is used by the Spanish Riding School of
- Vienna.
-
- Andy (& Russett)
-
- Andy Holt // City University // London EC1V 0HB // England // +44 71 477 8185
-