
Which bits are NOT showing distress???
Rolling eyes, ears flat back (not 'back listening to rider' but 'back unhappy and very uncomfortable and tense')...
That amount of saliva is Not Good, i wouldnt expect to see that much foam on a horse that had just finished a race or a xc.... never mind on a horse who is warming up!!!!!
It makes a mockery of what dressage is all abotu as far as i am concerned. These horses are supposed to be athletes who are trained to use their bodies in the best possible way.
None of the horribly, painfully, forcefully overbent horses there are using their bodies in the best possible way - they physically cant because they are tense and in pain.
Horses arent overbent to that degree IN the actual test, but its used to warm them up and once they give in and give that overbent chin on chest outline, they will give an 'on the bit nice round outline' allegedly much moer easily....
It is disgusting, its every bit as disgusting as the training methods used (mainly in the us) to produce 'rock hard' stances in In Hand arab showing (thatll be the startled, stiff, muscles flexed, on its toes thing if youve ever had the misfortune to see a h igh level arab show).....
Its every bit as disgusting as gingering, as soring and as rapping.
One other thing - look at the bridles, all of them with what LOOK like 'nice comfy padding' on the 'crank' nosebands.....
I refuse point blank to make heavily padded cranks. Because 'padding' does not in fact = 'nice' At All! All that padding crushes the horses flesh against his jawbonse, his cheeks in against his teeth, as the 'crank' (which sadist invented those!), is forced up far far tighter than a cavesson noseband has any right to be (do any of those nosebands look like you could get 2 or 3 fingers between them and the horses nose??)
The end result there is..... one hrose with a two bits in his mouth.... the snaffle part is not the problem, the CURB is, and a horses avoidance of the curb is to attempt to open hsi mouth.
In a heavily padded crank, he CANT open his mouth, and thus a skinny little dressage rider can force a 17hh warmblood to put his chin on his chest and carry on moving.
Yuck.
Em