At first, I accepted everything that I read as true, but as I gained more knowledge and experience, I began to be able to sort out correct information from that which was not.
One book that I read was The Big Book of Horses by Edward L. Chase. While out looking for HSOs last Friday, I found a copy of it in good shape.
I already had my childhood copy of the book, but at only $3.50, it would make a nice show prize for Happy Trails or a donation to someone else's show, so I purchased it.
Published in 1951, The Big Book of Horses is sixty-eight years old. As I leafed through it, I could tell that some of the information it contained was old and outdated. (I love this illustration!)
This sentence about it going to take a long time for machines to replace the work horse caught my eye right away. Nowadays, aside from Amish communities and a few others, you rarely see horses being used as work horses in the fields.
The purpose of using a heavy western saddle would be to make myself look like a cowboy and would then categorize me as one of "the worst riders"? An English saddle is the one to use when learning to ride as opposed to a western one? Reining and western dressage are only two disciplines using western tack that have put paid to those remarks!
The page titled "Don'ts in Horsemanship" had some information that I disagree with now and disagreed with when I was just a girl trying to learn.
The author's focus on horses was quite different from mine. How could I not fall in love with each and every horse I have owned? Or those that were not mine but who were under my care? I was smart enough as a girl to know that this was not an instruction that I would follow. Ever.
The horse world has done a lot of changing since this book came out in 1951. Still, it was fun to take a look back into my own horsey history as I paged through the old book. And, I discovered that there was still something for me to learn from it - not only has the horse world come a long way, but I have, too.




