I ride both Western and English (predominantly English now) and want a horse that can do both. But I am not looking to spend a fortune on the purchase price alone. The real expenses are keeping the horse! So if I buy a horse that is trained in Western and has a pedigree like Three Bars, Doc Bar, Poco Bueno, Bueno Chex, and King Fritz could they be trained in English, too? What would the process of introducing them to the new tack, positions, and paces be? Do you think a horse bred for reining would enjoy jumping and cross country? Nothing major, just for fun. Maybe a couple shows. Thanks!
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ALL of my horses had been trained Western before being trained English. My first horse had briefly been a barrel horse before going to a rental stable where she became one of their 3 "English" horses by virtue of the fact that she was small, not inclined to spook, and therefore not intimidating to novice riders. I turned her into a children's pony hunter because she was an outstanding jumper. My 2nd horse had been a Western trail horse all his life -- but I ride English, so I just changed his tack. Other than being a bit rusty on direct-rein aids at first, there really wasn't anything special I had to do. My current horse was little more than green-broke, so the tack and style of riding was a moot point in his case.
You can train a horse in whatever style suits you. Quarter horses, in particular, are very versatile. Whether a given horse truly excels in one discipline or another is really up to the individual horse and the skill of his trainer.
It's entirely possible to train a western horse to go English. Whether or not they would succeed in English events or enjoy them really depends on the horse. A horse bred for reining would most likely not excel at jumping or cross country because breeding for reining horses and breeding for jumpers/eventers are two very different things. They breed for different traits and confirmation in reining/western events than they do for jumpers/eventers. That being said, it's worth a try with the right horse and the right training.
I ride and show in both western and English pleasure. To my knowledge, my Paint had never worn English tack before and he didn't have any problems at all when I rode him in my English saddle and bridle for the first time. He was only ever trained for western pleasure, so to get him going like an English horse, I just kept asking him to move out more and more until he was consistently going at the pace I wanted. It took time and patience, but now we do pretty well in English pleasure/HUS as well as WP. I had the help of a trainer for the first few months, and that really made a difference as she had a much better idea of what she was doing that I did.
Good luck, I hope you find what you're looking for!
Find a french hyperlink D-ring or complete-cheek snaffle that matches your horse safely. Get a thoroughly-equipped (and good-oiled) english bridle, and you'll begin coaching english, even in a western saddle. If you utilize a western saddle, simply be mindful that you are going to nonetheless be fairly extra at the back of the movement than you could with right tack, however you wish to understand in case your horse likes it earlier than you pass to the price of shopping an extra saddle. So use the english bridle, and ask for extra touch, and ask the pony to transport ahead (extra ahead than western!). You can paintings at his gaits, pleasant ahead-relocating stroll, operating trot, canter as a substitute of lope... and notice the way it is going. Once you've got made up our minds that the pony can pass english, and are able to shop for a saddle, I have got to believe the bulk and recommend that you simply restrict the Indian leather-based saddles. They are very stiff, and the factor of english vs. western is to have extra consider, that you can not do with a western saddle, nor with one of the vital stiff, cardboardy saddles. There is not any quantity of neatsfoot oil in an effort to supple the leather-based on an Indian saddle. I was once instructed that they're shipped waxed (in order that they do not get moldy at the same time within the shipment holds), which could now not amazed me.
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