Actually a friend of mine rode a Polish Trakehner named OLAF, that she used to brag about how high that thing could buck. The story was he would scrape her back on the ceiling and she would say, 'OOOOHhhhhhhh....OLAF'. I saw her stick on HER Polish Trakehner or whatever he was (they called them 'Anglo Arabs' and they had not one single Thb or Arab in their first 2 generations and were as long as a bus) and that thing was so stiff and long and OH MY G** could that thing buck. Her neck would snap back and forth like a whip. She actually would kind of get loose and we would be sitting there thinking, 'WELL ISN'T THAT FASCINATING! IS SHE GOING TO FALL OFF OR NOT?'
When I saw him he was 22 and packing some poor sack of potatoes around a cross country course and SAVING HER A....backside.
As one person very diplomatically said about them, 'In general, they MATURE later than other horses'.
And it took me a few years before I realized what MATURE meant.
In general, though, warmbloods don't buck much, and you just sort of hope it stays that way. The old longer type, GOD when they would buck. But the more modern type that is shorter with longer legs is one he** of an 1100 lb pogo stick too.
AHAHAHAHAHAHHHHHAHAHAAHA!!!! Oh my side hurts. Oh I'm coughing. Yes, this is all I can do and I am sick.
If anyone wants to post some sort of questions that would encourage wels to type a lot, feel free. The second time wels gets sick in the spring, she starts to get - restless. And that is bad.
This is how my pony used to buck - I would stay on for - oh - a couple of them - but there were always more than a couple of them...