I do not have much Mustang experience but here is my personal experience with the breed:
I have only been stupid enough to get on a mustang once in my life, and I learned my lesson well and good. I was cleaning tack at a friends barn and she asked me to ride out with her for a break, and of course as any honest horse loving American girl would do I jumped at the opportunity to ride a different horse than the ones I rode at home. So she brings out her horse a lovely walker and a bay mare with a freeze brand on the left side of her neck AKA the Mustang. So we saddle the horses up and start riding toward the lake. The mare is riding fine and clam yet responsive, and we go on like that for about 20 min. So we get close to the lake and we pass this clear spot where you can see the neighbors pasture about ¼ a mile away or so and all of a sudden this mare goes bonkers. She goes nuts! Chomping the bit, shaking her head and then she bucks. So I am on this crazy butt mare going nuts for no apparent reason, trying to calm her down and she has her head thrashing up and down, doing to looney dance, she is simply having a fit. And my friend is talking about something trying to tell me something when this mare bolts. Just grabs that bit and runs with it. She covered nearly 15 acres of pasture before I finally got that mare to stop. I tried circles, sea sawing, popping, everything but something in that mare told her to run like hell and let me tell you she did all right. I later learned once my friend caught up that there had been a dog loose in the NEIGHBORS pasture ½ a mile away and thats what the mare had a fit about.
I like to think myself a decent rider; I have ridden all my life and taken lessons for years. I have been on bolting horses, buckers, barn sour, and a few nut cases but nothing like the mustang mare that bolted 15 acres over a loose dog half a mile away.
I consider Mustangs in general to be more unpredictable than the everyday horse, the fight or flight instinct in Mustangs is much more acute and sensitive than in the average horse. A survival technique that has kept them alive in the wild, but in my opinion is a horrible trait in a riding animal. I would not adopt a mustang if given the choice, especially when there are so many perfectly good riding animals sold in kill pens daily.
I have only been stupid enough to get on a mustang once in my life, and I learned my lesson well and good. I was cleaning tack at a friends barn and she asked me to ride out with her for a break, and of course as any honest horse loving American girl would do I jumped at the opportunity to ride a different horse than the ones I rode at home. So she brings out her horse a lovely walker and a bay mare with a freeze brand on the left side of her neck AKA the Mustang. So we saddle the horses up and start riding toward the lake. The mare is riding fine and clam yet responsive, and we go on like that for about 20 min. So we get close to the lake and we pass this clear spot where you can see the neighbors pasture about ¼ a mile away or so and all of a sudden this mare goes bonkers. She goes nuts! Chomping the bit, shaking her head and then she bucks. So I am on this crazy butt mare going nuts for no apparent reason, trying to calm her down and she has her head thrashing up and down, doing to looney dance, she is simply having a fit. And my friend is talking about something trying to tell me something when this mare bolts. Just grabs that bit and runs with it. She covered nearly 15 acres of pasture before I finally got that mare to stop. I tried circles, sea sawing, popping, everything but something in that mare told her to run like hell and let me tell you she did all right. I later learned once my friend caught up that there had been a dog loose in the NEIGHBORS pasture ½ a mile away and thats what the mare had a fit about.
I like to think myself a decent rider; I have ridden all my life and taken lessons for years. I have been on bolting horses, buckers, barn sour, and a few nut cases but nothing like the mustang mare that bolted 15 acres over a loose dog half a mile away.
I consider Mustangs in general to be more unpredictable than the everyday horse, the fight or flight instinct in Mustangs is much more acute and sensitive than in the average horse. A survival technique that has kept them alive in the wild, but in my opinion is a horrible trait in a riding animal. I would not adopt a mustang if given the choice, especially when there are so many perfectly good riding animals sold in kill pens daily.