flick: (Riding Angelo)
Flick ([personal profile] flick) wrote2012-01-22 03:55 pm

Pony pictures!

It wasn't entirely sunny today, but Mike took a few pictures with his phone of us with the new side saddle.

GB is definitely more comfortable and forward with it, which is good, and I think I did ok....

(Photos would, of course, be better if it wasn't slightly dull, and if the pictures weren't of a dark horse carrying a dark-clothed rider, against mostly dark-green background, as with this user pic, for example!)


It is, of course, very important to be elegant and lady-like at all times when riding aside....


These are about the best we managed, showing the two sides:

(I really need to clean my riding boots. I do *try* to only wear them for riding, but there always seems to be some reason (such as another horse's arse) why I need to walk over the grassmud when I'm leading him to the school.)
I'm quite pleased with the effect of the nice new saddle cloth: the colour looks well on him, and with the saddle. Of course, the saddle being brown means that if I were ever to show him using it I'd have to get, sigh, a new bridle....

And one of Mike, just to prove that he does occasionally, briefly, ride GB too!

[identity profile] desperance.livejournal.com 2012-01-22 05:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, I see. Knowing nothing, I'd always assumed there was only one post on a side-saddle, which you'd put your top leg around and then hook the foot of it under your other leg (under your flowing skirts, obviously), and thus secure your grip. Evidently, and not surprisingly, I was entirely wrong...

[identity profile] lil-shepherd.livejournal.com 2012-01-22 06:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Have you seen a Roman cavalry saddle? They had curved posts on both sides that you wedged your legs under - this meant that you could use a spear even though you didn't have stirrups.

Side saddle is incredibly secure and some horse go better in a side-saddle, though with most the problem is keeping the weight off the horse's loins.

[identity profile] green-knight.livejournal.com 2012-01-22 07:25 pm (UTC)(link)
The design you're thinking off is the pre-1830s saddle, which is much less secure. (The second horn, the one that gives the rider stability, is not called the 'leaping head' for nothing.) In medieval times, sidesaddles were little more than a flat cushion, which made the extremely unsafe; then they became more useful, and with the redesign, even suitable for the hunting field.

<watches desperance squirrel away knowledge>
ext_5856: (Default)

[identity profile] flickgc.livejournal.com 2012-01-22 07:50 pm (UTC)(link)
As green_knight said, they were like that at one time. The skirts mostly hide the workings, though.

(And, yes, now available for side saddle info for plotting purposes!)