A horse bucking in the field or on the lunge because he feels good is one thing, but bucking under saddle is another, ranging from fairly harmless little bunny hops to terrifying bronc shows. Usually, a horse bucking under the saddle has a reason; the usual culprit and easiest to avoid is a bit too much feed and not enough exercise. Another is the need to escape some sort of pressure, whether this is physical pain or badly-fitting gear. The one that is perhaps the most dangerous and difficult to fix is habitual bucking ‒ he has learned by bucking the pressure stops and this is often the ‘bronc bucking’, not only terrifying but often impossible to “just sit out.”

The Good Things in Life

Maybe you’ve bought a gorgeous new horse and want him to look round and shiny….the only problem is he’s jumping out of his skin and you’ve either hit the dirt already or are worried you will do soon. This is probably the easiest bucking problem to cure: cut out or reduce the hard feed [grain]! The majority of horses will do very well on just good-quality grass hay unless they’re competing regularly or in a lot of work. Just hay will help tame your fresh beast until you feel safe and think he’s ready for hard feed again.

Letting Off Steam

However, especially in winter, every horse needs the chance to let off steam and be a horse. Letting them free in the indoor is a great way to do this, but in order to avoid injuries make sure they are warmed up first they should spend 20 minutes in the walking machine, or even better, in hand.

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