Surrender to the Saddle Tree
By Lisa Dawes Brown

You buy a mare for 300-pounds. She looks like a miniature Rembrandt, but she 
is sulking, explosive. You saddle her, hack her out. Then you pick up the 
reins. You try not to feel your diaphragm tighten with the knowledge of the 
last three riders whom she towered over on her hind legs before crashing 
backward in the dirt. She begins to jig. After twenty minutes, your cheap 
investment, whose next appointment may be with the slaughter house, 
explodes. She is not unlike the medal-winning French horse you once saw, 
whose face wore an agonized look, and who, after 45 minutes of ring work, 
reared at the closed menage doors, crashed them open, caught her chin on the 
molding above, and flipped backward on her rider. How much more clearly do 
these two horses need to say, "Let me out of here!"

They have much in common with horses you see in every barn: The ones who 
won't bring their backs up, who don't track up, who buck after taking a 
fence or as you ask for a canter, who won't become regular in the trot, who 
pedastal or are long-based in the piaffe, who cross their legs in the 
piaffe, or have trouble with travers and ranvers going one direction, who 
show their toes to the sky and throw their legs from under at the trot, who 
cant their heads to the side at the halt.

There was a sign above Bill Clinton's desk in his campaign headquarters 
while he ran for president of the United States in 1992, and this philosophy 
saved him from scandal, blunder, and now from impeachment. It reads: "It's 
the economy, stupid." Where dressage horses are concerned, we might harshly 
say, "It's the saddle, stupid."

X-rays will not reveal what ails many troubled dressage horses. What we 
should x-ray is the saddle. If we did, we would find a rigid arch designed 
for one purpose: to provide structure from which to hang the stirrup 
leathers and suspend the seat; that is all. This arch, as its name implies, 
must not touch the top of the withers; this is basic.

The wither and shoulder region, thoracic vertebrae # 5 through #11, form an 
arch. The saddle forms an arch. When one is placed on top of the other, they 
must nest together perfectly like stacked chairs, to avoid a pressure point. 
This is impossible, because the arch above must not come in contact with the 
wither below. The points of the arch must, by design, bear into the 
trapezius muscle to hold the apex away from the wither. From an engineer's 
perspective, there is no other way. This saddle design is flawed.

We feel defensive, as if our saddle design is justified, because it exists, 
and it is all we know. Our trainers believe in it--or at least take it for 
granted--as have their trainers, and their predecessors. We behave as if the 
modern European design existed from the time man first threw a leg over a 
horse's back.

Why should we defend our saddles, if not to justify our own ignorance?

Viewed from a physical and engineering perspective, the concept of trying to 
carry weight on the arched surface of a horse's wither and shoulder with a 
rigid arch, is flawed.

The greatest light cavalries of the world, the Sarmations, the Tartars, the 
Huns, among others, swept down on whole civilizations on saddleless, 
bridleless horses, and defeated them. They were not too stupid to use 
saddles. They posessed them, but they knew one fact: Their horses' backs 
would be rendered unsound, unable to perform many of today's dressage 
movements, had they placed a rigid object on the horse's back and ridden 
into battle.

Rather than choose the comfort and security of a saddle and stirrup, they 
wrapped their torsos and legs against relentless concussion, inventing 
trousers and boots, and chose life over being hamstrung, because their war 
horse would be too inhibited by a saddle to obey subtle seat aids.

If our lives depended on the freedom of our horses' backs, we would have 
thrown out the saddle long ago.

The saddle is a contraption to help humans ride, and only when we swallow 
that bitter pill, are we able to see the symptoms of saddle pain in our own 
horses.



ATROPHY OF THE TRAPEZIUS AND UNDERLYING RHOMBOIDEUS MUSCLES.

When the arch of the saddle places pressure on the trapezius muscles behind 
the scapulas of the horse, the horse eventually surrenders to the tree. He 
"drops his withers" away from the pressure and pain. He does this by 
contracting his trapezius muscle and the underlying rhomboideus muscles 
anterior and posterior to the wither.

When the rider calls for the horse to work from his hocks, and bring his 
energy up through the croup, up the back, to his ears and to his nose, the 
horse cannot push the energy through. He must stop it where he contracts his 
trapezius and rhomboideus.

The energy flow does not proceed over the back and up the neck, it drops 
away to the sternum and base of the neck. If the rider is skilled, and the 
horse is valient, he pulls his forehand up (not with his loins) but with a 
mighty force from his lower neck, the brachiosephalicus, and by pulling up 
with his forelegs. His lower neck becomes "proud" from the effort to elevate 
the forehand while being forced down at the wither by the pinching of the 
arch.

With time, the contraction of the rhomboideus and trapezius causes hollows 
in front of the wither and behind the shoulders.

This pressure behind the scapulas limits their travel, causing horses to 
bring their forelegs "from under" unstead of freely over, as if throwing a 
baseball under-hand rather than over-hand.

It is possible for a medal-winning dressage horse to have hollows behind the 
shoulder and in front of the wither, and a straight, un-muscled top-line, 
but he had better have the best piaffe and passage in the world.

His rider enjoys "success," but at what cost? The most successful riders are 
often the last to question their saddles.

Does this argument against modern saddle design sound too simple? Aren't 
most problems? In a sick culture aren't the problems simple: hate, greed, 
power? In saddling, the problem is the arch; does it need to be more 
complex? The only complexity is within the rider's psyche, not being able to 
see it.



SADDLE-CAUSED TROUBLE IN LATERAL WORK

When a horse must bend, as in shouldering-in, or taking a lead, the 
trapezius and rhomboideus on the inside of the curve must contract. When a 
muscle contracts, it gets thicker. If you curl your fingertips under the 
leading edge of the arch of your saddle on one side while your horse is 
walking straight, and then bend your horse in that direction, any space for 
movement will be filled and your fingers squeezed. The horse's trapezius and 
shoulder are also squeezed. He will avoid it.

Emily Rawle of Oxford, Pennsylvania, who has competed at Grand Prix level 
for the last two years, who competed in the Pan Am selection trials in 1994, 
and in this year's try-outs for the world equestrian games, tells of a 
student who refused to switch to a different saddle design.

"She just quit with me, because she will not buy the saddle I recommend. I 
can't help her. The horse will go two strides in the left lead canter, and 
it stops and bucks. In this particular mare, the pressure is just behind the 
scapula on the left side. She cannot turn her shoulders to the left to be 
able to get her left leg up. When we get off, her mare is wet everywhere but 
in a dry circle behind her left shoulder," says 25-year-old Rawle, daughter 
of FEI dressage judge, Anne Rawle.

Often the pressure is not severe enough to cause a dry area, or the 
resulting growth of white hair, but it is severe enough to keep the horse 
from performing lateral work equally well on both sides, such as the travers 
or ranvers. These horses are often unable to halt squarely. Moving and 
bending relieves pressure from the side which is suffering the most 
pressure. Pedestaling or a long base in the piaffe, or crossing the front 
legs in the piaffe, are all coping mechanisms the horse may use to remove 
pressure from the shoulders-if only for an instant at a time.

_________________

Judy
http://iceryder.net
http://clickryder.com 

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