- Thread starter
- #31
- Jul 26, 2010
- 2,969
- 4
- 171
A spur stop? I think that's what started all this question - can you explain it more?
I was riding a reining horse, and its owner told me to use the spurs to do a sliding stop. There were several riders there who cued their horse to do a flying lead change by poking the horse in the shoulder with the toe of their boot, or their spurs.
Later, another western rider had a fit when I told her that. She said that was very, very wrong. Never, ever done. But she was not specific - is it never ever done in competition, or never ever done in training AND competition?
In all the recent reining competitions I watched no one actually did that, so either riders are using different cues these days, or it's a correction only used in training (much like what many of you described above, and I happened to see).
That made me really curious about use of spurs in general in Western riding. Obviously different people have a different opinion, but.....everyone has pretty much confirmed what I was wondering, that the use of spur is (or is supposed to be) pretty much the opposite from traditional dressage, at least according to the traditions in both types of riding.
To me BOTH make sense, within the whole training system of each style.
I was riding a reining horse, and its owner told me to use the spurs to do a sliding stop. There were several riders there who cued their horse to do a flying lead change by poking the horse in the shoulder with the toe of their boot, or their spurs.
Later, another western rider had a fit when I told her that. She said that was very, very wrong. Never, ever done. But she was not specific - is it never ever done in competition, or never ever done in training AND competition?
In all the recent reining competitions I watched no one actually did that, so either riders are using different cues these days, or it's a correction only used in training (much like what many of you described above, and I happened to see).
That made me really curious about use of spurs in general in Western riding. Obviously different people have a different opinion, but.....everyone has pretty much confirmed what I was wondering, that the use of spur is (or is supposed to be) pretty much the opposite from traditional dressage, at least according to the traditions in both types of riding.
To me BOTH make sense, within the whole training system of each style.
Last edited: