Monday, December 22, 2008

Endurance Saddle

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The endurance saddle was designed for endurance competition where horse and rider can cover 50 to 100 miles in a single day. To be competitive, a rider needs a saddle that is lighter weight but still sturdy enough to withstand the long miles that can include rugged and steep terrain. Built for close contact with the horse, this saddle minimizes bulk wherever possible.
Typical features of an endurance saddle include:

  • Very comfortable, often padded, seat for long hours in the saddle
  • Typically, no horn in order to prevent the rider from getting poked in the stomach when posting, standing while trotting, or jumping trail obstacles
  • Very short, rounded skirt to lessen weight
  • Deep stirrups for comfort
  • Single rigging, typically in center-fire position, to prevent the saddle from tipping
  • A good number of saddle strings and rigging dees for securing gear
  • Smaller and lighter weight

While designed for competition, the endurance saddle is gaining popularity as a general trail saddle. It’s unusual styling, which is influenced by English versions, results in the most “unique” looking of all of the western saddle styles.

 

Tucker Endurance SaddleEndurance Saddle

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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Ranch Saddle



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A ranch saddle is a true working saddle. You’ll find these saddles also called "cowboy," "buckaroo," "old time," and "all-around," with each term indicating slight differences. What they all have in common, however, is that they’re heavyweight, sturdy saddles designed both for cow work and for long hours of riding. Their goal is both comfort and
functionality for a variety of ranch work.


Typical features of a ranch saddle include:


  • A deep seat, set low on the horse for comfort and communication
  • Low swells to stay out of the way of the work. Many are Slick Fork (also known as A-Fork) saddles
  • A tall, thick horn with a horn wrap for dallying
  • Fenders hung directly below the rider for correct riding and working position
  • Double rigging - both a front cinch and a flank cinch
  • Typically, plate rigging for even pull on the horse and maximum strength
  • Higher cantle
  • Multiple saddle strings for tying gear on to the saddle
  • A rope strap for holding a lariat
  • Heavier weight
he ranch saddle, particularly the slick fork-style with a Wade tree,
has regained popularity of late with the renewed interest in the
buckaroo style of tack and riding. You’ll find a wide variety of these
solid saddles for sale among both custom saddle makers and
manufacturers. The ranch saddle is just a solid all-around using
saddle.










McCall Ranch Saddle Longhorn Ranch Saddle

McCall

Longhorn



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Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Australian Saddle

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Not very many people are aware of the numerous advantages of an Australian saddle. This type of saddle promises improved rider comfort along with better fit and comfort for the horse. Greater rider security and safety and a more natural riding position make an Australian saddle a popular choice amongst novice riders. According to Aussie saddle manufacturers, and the many people who have ridden in one, once you've ridden in an Australian stock saddle, you will never want to ride in an English or Western saddle ever again.

The Australian saddle is basically a hybrid between a Western and an English saddle. However, a few additional features have been added that set the Aussie saddle apart from the other two. The addition of poleys or kneepads is one of the most obvious differences. These kneepads or ears should be parallel to the rider's thigh and about 1/2" away when seated. You'll notice the true value of the poleys when you're riding up or down any type of hill no matter how big or small. The poleys will help to keep you securely seated.

The girthing system is also quite different on an Australian saddle. A very simple, yet efficient double girthing system is used to attach the saddle to the horse. The billet straps and overgirth both buckle directly to the girth using an unusual leverage system. With the double girthing system you can make the Aussie saddle tighter with more efficiency, eliminating any chance of the saddle slipping off. If the billet strap breaks, the overgirth will provide additional safety.

The stirrup leathers on an Australian saddle are also designed with rider safety in mind. They are attached to the saddle in such a way that if you were to fall off and be dragged, the stirrup leathers will release from the saddle, reducing the risk of injury.

Overall the Australian saddle has evolved to suit the requirements of today's rider. The ability of the under padding to conform to the back of the horse also makes this saddle a great choice when it comes to fitting your horse. Security, comfort for horse and rider, reliability, lightweight, and overall performance make the Aussie saddle the perfect choice for almost everyone.
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Thursday, September 25, 2008

Quarantined horses tested for flu

September 25, 2008

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ALL 74 horses at a New South Wales quarantine station are being retested for equine influenza (EI) after one horse returned a positive result, federal Agriculture Minister Tony Burke says.

While the horse in question at the Eastern Creek Quarantine Facility, in western Sydney, had returned a negative result after the same sample was retested, all the horses at the centre would be retested, Mr Burke said today.

The results of all of the horses will be known in the next few days and all would remain in quarantine until there is an all-clear.

"Right at this point, I'm not at the stage of being able to say it's time to relax because the second result came back as a negative,'' Mr Burke said in Canberra.

"We know how devastating it (EI) was a year ago.

"The billion-dollar figure is often quoted, the truth is we'll never know the full cost of that outbreak.''

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Saturday, September 13, 2008

The United Classic Horse Show and Morab Nationals

NOTE: The 2008 United Classic is cancelled due to the pending consolidation of the Morab Horse Association & Register, Inc. and the Purebred Morab Horse Association. This consolidation is an excellent move toward unifying the Morab breed and the cancellation of the show in no way reflects anything negative on the show or the Morab breed. The United Classic will be back in 2009 so please watch for an update.

" What Exhibitors Call the Best Show of the Season!!Bringing the fun back to showing in a Class A environment with focus on youth and amateur exhibitors and horses. "

September 19, 2008 to September 21, 2008

Wahl Equestrian Center, Sterling, Illinois
Sterling, Illinois

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How to saddle a Horse

Step1
Know that horses come in all shapes and sizes. You'll need to find a saddle that properly fits your horse. It's best to bring your horse to a saddlery so you can fit several saddles at a time.
Step2
Select a saddle that fits snugly over the horse's withers, shoulders and back without digging in.
Step3
Set the saddle on top of a saddle pad without snugging the cinch down. There should be no gaps around the entire skirt of the saddle.
Step4
Tighten down the cinch to secure the saddle to the horse.
Step5
Slide your hand in between the horse and the saddle pad. You should be able to move your fingers all the way around the saddle without forcing it.
Step6
Look to see that the saddle doesn't hit the horse's withers.
Step7
Choose a saddle that fits properly over a saddle that doesn't fit as well but is designed for the type of riding you'll be doing. Fit comes before function.
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Friday, September 12, 2008

How to saddle a Horse

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Saddle

Background

A saddle is a seat for the rider of an animal, usually a horse. A well-made saddle gives the horse rider the necessary support, security, and control over the animal. The saddle makes it possible for the rider to keep in balance with the horse by allowing him or her to sit over the horse's point of balance.

The first saddles were simply animal skins or cloths thrown over the backs of horses, offering only a small measure of comfort to the riders. About 2,000 years ago, the Sarmatians, a nomadic tribe who lived around the Black Sea region, designed a saddle based on a shaped wooden foundation, or tree. The tree had front and rear arches joined by wooden bars on each side of the horse's spine. This design, improved upon during the medieval era with the advent of the dip-seated saddle, survives in an adapted form as the Western saddle.

A typical saddle includes a base frame or "tree"; a seat for the rider; skirts, panels, and flaps that protect the horse from the rider's legs and vice versa; a girth that fits around the stomach of the horse and keeps the saddle stable; and stirrups for the rider's feet.

The saddle tree is the frame on which the saddle is built. Its shape determines the shape of the saddle, which varies from the flat-race tree weighing only a few ounces to the modern dip-seated spring tree.

Ideally, the tree should be built to fit the back of the horse for which the saddle is intended. Most of the time, however, saddles are manufactured for certain sizes and shapes and will fit most horses of equivalent sizes and shapes. Trees are usually made in three width fittings: narrow, medium, and broad, and four lengths: 15 inches, 16 inches, 16 1/2 inches and 17 1/2 inches (38.1, 40.64, 41.9, and 44.45 centimeters respectively).

Panels are cushions divided by a channel that gives a comfortable padded surface to the horse's back while raising the tree high enough to give easy clearance of the animal's spine. The panels also disperse the rider's weight over a larger surface, thereby protecting the horse from the weight of the rider. These panels also protect the horse's back from the hardness of the saddle. The purpose of the skirts is to protect the rider's legs from the sweat of the horse, and to cover the girths and girth straps. Saddles also include D-rings, small leather straps with strings attached that can hold canteens, jackets, food pouches, and other items.

Modern horse saddles are divided into two broad categories: the English and Western saddle. Originally designed for show jumping, the English saddle has a deep seat and sloped back. Its design was derived in part from the crouched-forward position adopted by Tod Sloan, an American jockey, and the subsequent Italian design introduced by Caprilli in 1906. Sloan's forward crouch placed the rider's weight forward, thus freeing the horse's loins and hindquarters. Because professional jockeys had previously positioned their weight on the loins and behind the movement of the horse, Sloan's technique revolutionized professional horse racing.

One type of English saddle, the "jumping saddle," is designed to position the rider more forward. It is almost always built on a spring tree and generally has a deep seat. In

The first step in saddle manufacture is treating the leather. This involves soaking the hide in a lime solution to loosen the outer layer of skin and the hair, and then removing the hair. The frame of the saddle is the tree. One typical tree type, the spring tree, is shaped out of thin plywood. Fiberglass material (the fiberglass looks like a white screen mesh) is then stretched over this plywood, and liquid resin is hand-brushed or sprayed on top, resulting in a very strong and durable product.
The first step in saddle manufacture is treating the leather. This involves soaking the hide in a lime solution to loosen the outer layer of skin and the hair, and then removing the hair.
The frame of the saddle is the tree. One typical tree type, the spring tree, is shaped out of thin plywood. Fiberglass material (the fiberglass looks like a white screen mesh) is then stretched over this plywood, and liquid resin is hand-brushed or sprayed on top, resulting in a very strong and durable product.
contrast, the "dressage saddle" is designed to position the rider more to the center of the horse, allowing him or her to use the leg and weight aids with greater precision. Only the sweat flap separates the rider's leg from the horse. Today, English saddles are used for sport and general purposes.

Traditionally, the Western saddle has been used primarily for work. It has a wider and longer panel than the English saddle and disperses more of the rider's weight over the back of the horse. Western saddles also have a roping horn on the pommel to facilitate the roping of cattle, and are equipped with extra D-rings, or tie-downs, to hold ropes and other items.

There are four types of Western saddles. The pleasure or "ranch saddle," which weighs approximately 25 pounds (11.35 kilograms), and the "equitation saddle," weighing about 25 to 30 pounds (11.35 to 13.62 kilograms), are suitable for general riding. The "roping saddle" (about 40 to 50 pounds [18 to 23 kilograms) is designed for use in cattle roping. Because of the comfort it provides, many find it suitable for general riding as well. The "cutting saddle" is slightly lighter, about 30 pounds, and is used in cow cutting competitions. Because its light weight allows for greater movement, some riders also find the cutting saddle suitable for general purposes.

Raw Materials

Flaps, girth straps, and stirrup leathers are typically made from animal skins taken from cattle, pig, sheep, or deer; cowhide is the most common skin used in saddle making. Saddle trees can be composed of several materials, including beech wood, fiberglass, plastic, laminated wood, steel, aluminum, and iron. Seats are usually made from canvas, felt, and wool, while panels can include plastic foam, rubber, and linen.

The Manufacturing
Process

Treating the leather

  • 1 After the hide or skin is removed from the animal's carcass, it is soaked in drums containing lime and other chemicals to loosen the hair and outer layer of the skin. The inside flesh layer is also removed, either by machine or hand with a special knife. The remaining hide is soaked in lime and bacteria solutions to remove residue. Next, the hair is removed, either by machine or manually with a special knife. The hide is soaked again, this time in an acid solution in order to remove the lime left by the previous soakings. Because it is important that the fleshy side is left smooth with no loose fibers, the hide undergoes a final treatment called scudding, which involves hanging the hide over a beam and removing any bits of remaining hair, tissue, and dirt with a blunt knife. The hide is then thoroughly washed.
  • 2 To prevent hides from decaying, they are immersed in a diluted solution of tanning acid. Over several months, they are gradually treated with stronger solutions. Oil tanning, or chamoising, is still used sometimes by rubbing animal or fish grease into the hide.
  • 3 At this point, the leather has two sides, the flesh side and the grain side. The hides are now given to a currier, who manually rubs a mixture of tallow, cod oil, and other greases, plus wax, into the leather over a period of time. This process gives the leather color, makes it flexible, durable, and waterproof. The most common and popular colors for saddles are golden yellow, also known as the London color, and Havana, which is of a darker shade. Warwick, a much darker color that turns black with use, is applied in the making of frizzing harness as opposed to riding tack. (This color is produced by staining with aniline dye.) The currier then allows the hides to mature for several weeks.

Making the saddle tree

  • 4 There are two basic saddle tree designs: the rigid and spring tree, both of which can accommodate either a straight or dipped seat. The modern English saddle usually has a spring tree, while the Western saddle has a rigid tree.

    The spring tree is first shaped out of thin plywood. Fiberglass material (the fiberglass looks like a white screen mesh) is then stretched over this plywood, and liquid resin is hand-brushed or sprayed on top, resulting in a very strong and durable product. Two "springs" made of lightweight steel strips are then inserted under the tree running from front to the rear along the widest part of the seat, and set about two inches (five centimeters) from the outside. The springs provide greater comfort and more flexibility to the rider by allowing the pressure exerted through the seat bones to be transmitted to the horse.

  • 5 The rigid saddle tree is made by molding it out of fiberglass, by combining wood shavings with resin in a mold under pressure, or by creating a wooden tree around which wet leather strips are wrapped and allowed to dry.
  • 6 To reinforce the saddle tree, steel plates are placed underneath the tree from the pommel (the head) to the cantle (the rear part of the saddle, which projects upward). The steel plates are secured above and below the pommel at the head and gullet of the tree.

Stirrups

  • 7 The stirrup bars are attached next. A prong-line metal bracket measuring three inches wide is bolted onto the tree below the head on the point of the tree (the forward-most point of the saddle). Bars are made of two pieces: the bar itself, and a movable catch or "thumb piece," which is set into the bar. This catch works on the premise that it can be opened when the stirrup leather is put in position and will, in theory, open and release the leather if the rider should fall. The bars are always forged (hammered or squeezed into the proper shape) or cast (put into a liquid state and forced into a shaped mold), and the word "forged" or "cast" is always stamped on the bar.
    A typical saddle includes a seat for the rider; skirts, panels, and flaps that protect the horse from the rider's legs and vice versa; a girth that fits around the stomach of the horse and keeps the saddle stable; and stirrups for the rider's feet. D-rings are used to hold items such as canteens or ropes.
    A typical saddle includes a seat for the rider; skirts, panels, and flaps that protect the horse from the rider's legs and vice versa; a girth that fits around the stomach of the horse and keeps the saddle stable; and stirrups for the rider's feet. D-rings are used to hold items such as canteens or ropes.
  • 8 The stirrup leathers, about 7/8 inch (2.2 centimeters) wide, are made from "read leather": cowhide, rawhide, or buffalo hide. They go over the top of the bar and back down to the stirrups.

The seat

  • 9 A strong muslin cloth is placed over the tree from the pommel to the cantle, to form a foundation. Pitch paint is then applied to waterproof it. Next, strips of white serge, a woolen material, are stretched and fastened tightly with small nails from the head of the tree at the pommel to the cantle. Stretch canvas is then positioned over the serge and nailed in place. This forms the base of the seat.
  • 10 Small pieces of shaped felt and leather (called bellies) are placed on the edges of the tree at the broadest part of the seat so that when the seat is eventually made, it will not drop away at the edges. A piece of serge is then tightly stretched and stitched down to the canvas layer to make the shape of the seat. Next, a small slit is made so that the space between the serge and canvas can be lightly stuffed with wool to give the seat resilience and to prevent the tree itself being felt through the leather seat.
  • 11 Pigskin is now dampened and stretched tightly, and is then stretched over the seat. (The pigskin is dampened and stretched so that when it dries and shrinks, a neat and tight final product will be achieved.) The under panel, which protects the horse from the girths, is stitched and nailed into place on the tree. The under panel is usually made of pigskin leather or grained cowhide.

Girths

  • 12 Girth straps are attached to the saddle next. Made of soft leather, these straps are very short. Attached to them are the girths, whose purpose is to hold the saddle firmly in place by fastening them around the horse's belly. These girths are made in 7/8-inch or one-inch (2.54 centimeters) thick sizes, and they can range in length from 36 inches (91.44 centimeters) for a tiny pony to 54 inches (137 centimeters) for a large horse (these measurements include the buckles). Girths are made of soft leather, mohair, or nylon.

Panels

  • 13 The outer panels, made of leather, are stuffed with felt, wool, or plastic foam and are covered in either leather, serge, or linen. They are attached underneath the saddle. Leather skirts are then sewn just above the outer panel. D-rings (also known as tie-downs) are now attached to the saddle. Usually about one inch wide, the D-rings are made of rawhide and have strings attached to them.

Byproducts

Byproducts of saddle manufacturing include saddle and bridle accessories such as bit guards, lip straps, leather straps for the nose nets, breastplates, and girth safes, which prevent the buckles from wearing a hole in the panel.

Where To Learn More

Books

Baker, Jennifer. Saddlery and Horse Equipment: A Practical Horse Guide. Arco Publishing, 1982.

Beatie, Russel H. Saddles. University of Oklahoma Press, 1981.

The Complete Book of Riding: A Guide to Saddlery, Care and Management, International Breeds, Riding Techniques and Competitive Riding. Gallery Books, 1989.

Crabtree, Helen K. Saddle Equitation. Doubleday, 1982.

Sherer, Richard L. Horseman's Handbook of Western Saddles. Sherer Custom Saddles, 1988.

Eva Sideman

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