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Saddle Fitting
-How
to tell if your saddle fits
-Proper
measuring for a new saddle
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Fitting saddles needs to be done
correctly to allow for movement without pinching or pain. If you are
noticing discomfort or changes in your horse's attitude or behavior
under saddle then it may be time for a thorough assessment of how your
saddle is fitting.
All of the following steps need to be done with your horse standing
squarely on level ground with his head and neck straight ahead, so an
assistant may be necessary. Perform all the steps on both sides of
your horse (most horses are asymmetrical) and with the saddle in
direct contact with your horse's back, no pad.
All-purpose, eventing, close-contact
and dressage saddles usually range from 14" to 19" using 1/2"
increments. Saddle seat or cutback saddles usually measure from 17" to
22" using 1" increments. They are measured from the button or rivet
at the front of the pommel to the highest point of the cantle.
How to tell if your saddle fits
Step One: Position Of The Saddle
Place the saddle slightly forward
on the horse's withers. Next, press down on the pommel and slide the
saddle rearward until it stops at the resting place which is dictated
by each horse's conformation.
Repeat this procedure several times until you feel the saddle stop in
the same spot repeatedly, well behind the shoulder blade. Resist the
temptation to place the saddle too far forward on the withers. This is
a very common fitting mistake and can interfere with your horse's
soundness and movement.
Step Two: Angle Of The Points
To find the points, lift the flap of the saddle and
look for a little leather pocket into which the wooden processes of
the pommel are fitted. This is the point pocket and there is one on
both sides of the pommel of the saddle just under the stirrup bars.
These points should lie parallel to the withers. If the angles are too
narrow, the points will dig into the musculature, also causing the
middle of the saddle to be in uneven contact with the horse's back. If
they are too wide the saddle will sit down in front putting pressure
on top of the withers. To assess the point angles, stand looking from
the front with the flap lifted; the points should be parallel with the
musculature within 10 degrees of the heaviest side. Some points are
concealed making it difficult to determine their angles. If this is
the case, you will have to rely
more on the panel pressure procedure to determine if the point angles
are correct.
Step Three: Panel Pressure and Contact
(Note: The panels are the wool stuffed underside of
the saddle, which rest on the horse's back.)
Place one hand in the center of the saddle and press
down to secure the saddle in place as you test for panel pressure. Run
your other hand between the front of the panels and your horse's
musculature and feel for any uneven pressure under the points. The
front panel should not pinch the withers in any area.
While maintaining pressure on the top of the saddle, run your hand,
palm up, under the entire panel along the back feeling for even
pressure. You may also raise the sweat flap to ensure that the panels
fit snugly and evenly on both sides of the withers and along the back
to check for bridging. Bridging is a space near the center of the
where the panels do not make good contact with the horse's back. Wool
stuffed panels are almost universally considered superior to foam for
the following reasons: assuming correctly designed panels, wool
conforms to the many shapes of the horses back and can be adjusted if
necessary to correct for a multitude of fitting problems. You cannot,
however, correct for a poorly designed or incorrectly fitted tree.
Step Four: Pommel To Cantle
Relationship
Visualize a straight line parallel to the ground from
the pommel to the cantle. In saddles with deep or moderately deep
seats, the cantle should be between 2 to 3 inches higher than the
pommel. In shallower seats, such as close contact jumping saddles, the
cantle may only be approximately 1 to 2 inches higher than the pommel.
In almost any saddle, if the cantle is level with or below the pommel,
the saddle is not properly fitted.
Step Five: Level Seat
Visualize the same straight line parallel to the ground
and look this time at the deepest part of the seat.
This area should be level in order to put the rider squarely on their
seat bones and in balance.
Step Six: Wither Clearance
There should be adequate clearance between the pommel
and the top of the horse's withers, approximately two to three
fingers. More than three fingers clearance may mean the pommel is too
high, i.e. the tree is too narrow. A saddle with less than 2-3 fingers
may mean that the saddle is too wide. With wool stuffed panels, make
allowance for the saddle to settle a half inch or so. There is an
exception to this indicator: horses with flat, round withers may have
more clearance than usual under the pommel. In these situations you
may need to rely more on the balance of the seat and pommel to cantle
relationship. On horses with high, narrow withers maintaining proper
clearance is something that has to be monitored and maintained.
Step Seven: Channel Clearance/Gullet
Width
There should also be adequate clearance over the spine
and connective tissue throughout the channel of the saddle. A channel
that is too narrow will impede the horses movement dramatically and
may even cause the spine to be observably sore. Feel the width of the
spine and connective tissue with your fingers and estimate its width.
The channel of the saddle should completely clear this width, resting
on the long back muscle of the back called the longissimus dorsi.
Repeat Steps 6 & 7 with the
rider in the saddle, checking for adequate clearance over the withers
and spine.
Step Eight: Saddle Stability
The saddle should remain stable and not shift
excessively from side to side or from front to back. Keep in mind that
such shifting may be a function of your horse's symmetry and not the
saddle. A qualified saddle fitter should be able to make suggestions
to minimize or eliminate the problem.
Step Nine: Seat Length
The saddle should never go behind the 18th thoracic
vertebra, which is the vertebra corresponding with the last rib.
Behind this vertebra are the lumbar vertebrae, which is the weakest,
non-weight bearing area of the back.
Step Ten: Horse Response
Throughout the whole saddle fitting process, monitor
your horse's response:
- Watch his ears and body language.
Does he try to step away from the saddle or flinch when it is placed
on his back?
- Or is the opposite true; is he
more accepting of the saddle? How does he move when he is ridden?
Does he seem freer or more restricted?
The horse is the most honest
indicator we have when fitting a saddle so pay attention to it and
note any changes.
Proper measuring for a new saddle
Tools needed to take a wither tracing:
1. A sheet of paper at least the size of legal typing
paper and a flat surface to lay it on.
2. A pen.
3. A flexible curve. This is essentially a piece of solder wire
covered in rubber and is approximately 2 long. It can be purchased
in the drafting section of an office supply store.
4. Someone to assist keeping the horse square and straight.
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| The curve at the
points |
The point of the
saddle |
Where to take the tracing:
The wither tracing should be taken under the points of
the saddle tree or approximately 2.5-3 behind the back edge of the
horse's scapula (shoulder blade). The points are the right and left
side of the pommel that run parallel to the sides of the horse's
withers. The points of the tree can be located by lifting the leg flap
and looking at the top front of the sweat flap, just below the front
of the stirrup bar. There you will typically see a half circle of
stitching. These are the point pockets in which the points of the
saddle tree rest.
Positioning the saddle correctly allows the scapula to rotate/ slide
several inches without interference or injury from the tree.
The best technique for positioning the saddle is to push it down and
back until it stops at a spot dictated by the
horse's conformation. Typically people stop pushing before the saddle
stops sliding. This results in the saddle
being still too far forward on the horse's withers. Once the saddle is
in the correct position, find the points and place your finger or a
mark under the points. Assuming the points are approximately 2.5-3
behind the back edge of the horse's scapula, this is where your
tracing will be taken.
If the saddle you are using has forward points, as many of the older
jumping saddles do, do not use it to determine point position. Simply
find a spot 2.5-3 behind the scapula.
| Too far forward
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Correct |
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Steps to do the tracing:
1.
Fold the flexible curve and place the
center over the spine. At this point the horse must be standing square
with his head and neck straight forward.
2.Press
the curve into the sides of the withers until it conforms to the
horse's shape.
3.
Carefully remove the curve and place it on the paper.
4.Trace
the inside edge of the curve. Indicate off side and near side of the
tracing.
Optional:
Additional tracings may be taken of the
topline and across the back at T-16 (approx. 3 in front of the
vertebra that corresponds with the last rib). The topline tracing
should start at the same position as the points of the tree.
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First Tracing |
T-16
Tracing |
Topline |
Our thanks to the Master Saddlers
Association for some of the above information. |