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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 742
   
| Seeing the young people winning big shows in the Magic Seat do you think we will start to see them more and more? Im a believer in learning the correct way to ride and gaining strength and balance from no aids but I can defenitely see the MS being used for therapeutic riders. I guess to take a few tenths off the MS has helped these people win. They scare me but that's just me. This post is not intended to start WW3. |
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The Resident Destroyer of Liberal Logic
   Location: PNW | No way could I ever ride in one. I hate feeling trapped AT ALL. But I don't care one bit if somebody else does.
It will definitely be interesting to see whether or not more people start using them :) |
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 Expert
Posts: 1857
      
| I hope not... For me personally I don't want to be strapped onto something with a mind of it's own! If I need to ditch my ride, I want to be able too! |
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Elite Veteran
Posts: 1115
 
| I'm with you that it's better to learn without the aid of a magic seat. They do scare me because you are strapping yourself to the horse.
As for using them for the disabled, I'm a certified therapeutic riding instructor and I can tell you the magic seats are not allowed in Therapeutic Riding Facilities. As per the PATH Intl. standards, riders cannot be strapped to the horse in any way that they cannot be quickly released with a light pull. Magic seats require a much stronger pull or the weight of the rider in some cases to release the velcro. Another reason why they scare me. If you can't use it in therapy for safety reasons why on earth would you use it if you are able bodied. |
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Elite Veteran
Posts: 725
   
| From what I have seen with the MS, they do not actually keep you from getting away for the horse. They are just an aid to help a rider maintain balance. The velcro is designed to turn loose if the horse was to fall or the rider get way out of balance. I don't see anything wrong with them on small children that does not have enough strength in thier legs to keep proper balance. |
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 Born not Made
Posts: 2937
       Location: North Dakota | Cdunn - 2015-07-29 3:50 PM I don't see anything wrong with them on small children that does not have enough strength in thier legs to keep proper balance.
Just my own opinoin, but if your SMALL CHILD cannot keep their own balance, then they do not need to be riding your 1D barrel horse.
I say they can ride that awesome explosive horse when they have the ability to, like this famous little girl, without the aid of a Magic Seat: http://photographyblog.dallasnews.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/66/files/staff-best-0223-0301/77.jpg
That's just my opinion. Of course, if there is a physical ailment going on, there is a time and a place where a Magic Seat can be useful. But for an able-bodied person or child.....Nope.
IMO |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 742
   
| r_beau - 2015-07-29 4:16 PM Cdunn - 2015-07-29 3:50 PM I don't see anything wrong with them on small children that does not have enough strength in thier legs to keep proper balance. Just my own opinoin, but if your SMALL CHILD cannot keep their own balance, then they do not need to be riding your 1D barrel horse.
I say they can ride that awesome explosive horse when they have the ability to, like this famous little girl, without the aid of a Magic Seat:
http://photographyblog.dallasnews.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/66/files/staff-best-0223-0301/77.jpg
That's just my opinion. Of course, if there is a physical ailment going on, there is a time and a place where a Magic Seat can be useful. But for an able-bodied person or child.....Nope.
IMO
I completely agree. I did see a small child using one last year and she was probably 6-8 years old and the poor thing looked like a ragdoll. Her horse ran a 3D time and I highly doubt she could stay on him without the magic seat but it looked like her neck and body took a beating. If adults want to use them-go for it but parents should teach or have their children taught to ride right and balanced before moving up on calibar horses. |
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 Take a Picture
Posts: 12842
       
| Cdunn - 2015-07-29 3:50 PM
From what I have seen with the MS, they do not actually keep you from getting away for the horse. They are just an aid to help a rider maintain balance. The velcro is designed to turn loose if the horse was to fall or the rider get way out of balance. I don't see anything wrong with them on small children that does not have enough strength in thier legs to keep proper balance.Β
Alliie also won the BBR. I have friends that run in WPRA rodeos with a Magic seat. You know them too Cdunn. I also know pro trainers who have used them because on an injury. I ride one horse out of my three with a Magic seat. I laugh about it and most people I know laugh with me and say whatever it takes. Personally, I like to see people win rather than criticize because they did. I was thinking "Darn, that kid did it again" |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 742
   
| No doubt kids win riding wiht it but I think its a poor decision to make as a parent. If adults want to wear one they take that risk but kids don't have to ability to know better. I know a woman here that uses big rubber bands to strap herself into very fast horses and she had a bad wreck last year and could not get away. I know MS and rubber bands are two different things but keeping a person in a saddle is a danger waiting to happen. I have taken some very bad falls around barrels that I was able to quickly kick free from. How do you know if the velcro won't come back in contact when you try to kick away? I really don't want to see a kid get hurt because our sport is already risky to begin with. |
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Veteran
Posts: 129
  Location: Sanderson, TX | r_beau - 2015-07-29 4:16 PM Cdunn - 2015-07-29 3:50 PM I don't see anything wrong with them on small children that does not have enough strength in thier legs to keep proper balance. Just my own opinoin, but if your SMALL CHILD cannot keep their own balance, then they do not need to be riding your 1D barrel horse.
I say they can ride that awesome explosive horse when they have the ability to, like this famous little girl, without the aid of a Magic Seat:
http://photographyblog.dallasnews.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/66/files/staff-best-0223-0301/77.jpg
That's just my opinion. Of course, if there is a physical ailment going on, there is a time and a place where a Magic Seat can be useful. But for an able-bodied person or child.....Nope.
IMO
You know what they say about opinions. My daughter ran in one for a time and it helped make her a competent confident rider. She moved out of by age 7 or 8 and now has a waiting list for outside horses. I would much rather see a child with a seat than balancing on the reins because they have short legs with limited grip. If I really cared to validate MY opinion, I would post videos; however, I find I have more interesting things to do than rehash a subject that has been beaten to death more than once here . |
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 Take a Picture
Posts: 12842
       
| Mind Bender - 2015-07-29 9:11 PM
r_beau - 2015-07-29 4:16 PM Cdunn - 2015-07-29 3:50 PMΒ I don't see anything wrong with them on small children that does not have enough strength in thier legs to keep proper balance.Β Β Just my own opinoin, but if your SMALL CHILD cannot keep their own balance, then they do not need to be riding your 1D barrel horse.
I say they can ride that awesome explosive horse when they have the ability to, like this famous little girl, without the aid of a Magic Seat:
http://photographyblog.dallasnews.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/66/files/staff-best-0223-0301/77.jpg
That's just my opinion. Of course, if there is a physical ailment going on, there is a time and a place where a Magic Seat can be useful. But for an able-bodied person or child.....Nope.
IMO
Β
Β You know what they say about opinions. Β My daughter ran in one for a time and it helped make her a competent confident rider. Β She moved out of by age 7 or 8 and now has a waiting list for outside horses. Β I would much rather see a child with a seat than balancing on the reins because they have short legs with limited grip. Β If I really cared to validate MY opinion, I would post videos; however, I find I have more interesting things to do than rehash a subject that has been beaten to death more than once hereΒ  . Β
Beaten to death is quite an understatement. Laughing.
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 742
   
| Mind Bender - 2015-07-29 9:11 PM r_beau - 2015-07-29 4:16 PM Cdunn - 2015-07-29 3:50 PM I don't see anything wrong with them on small children that does not have enough strength in thier legs to keep proper balance. Just my own opinoin, but if your SMALL CHILD cannot keep their own balance, then they do not need to be riding your 1D barrel horse.
I say they can ride that awesome explosive horse when they have the ability to, like this famous little girl, without the aid of a Magic Seat:
http://photographyblog.dallasnews.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/66/files/staff-best-0223-0301/77.jpg
That's just my opinion. Of course, if there is a physical ailment going on, there is a time and a place where a Magic Seat can be useful. But for an able-bodied person or child.....Nope.
IMO
You know what they say about opinions. My daughter ran in one for a time and it helped make her a competent confident rider. She moved out of by age 7 or 8 and now has a waiting list for outside horses. I would much rather see a child with a seat than balancing on the reins because they have short legs with limited grip. If I really cared to validate MY opinion, I would post videos; however, I find I have more interesting things to do than rehash a subject that has been beaten to death more than once here  .
I wasn't asking anyone to prove themselves or their kids. I was asking if anyone thought it would become a TREND because so many kids are winning in them? |
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Elite Veteran
Posts: 1096
   
| I do not believe it will become a trend. I do think that more people will consider using them because more people that have won have been "spotted" riding with them.
I have two young daughters, 7 and 11. My youngest is very tiny. I will not use them for her. I am an old school believer of wanting them to learn balance and be able to ride before I put them on a rocket. This is why she is on her spicy lil pony. I have bigger horses but she does not have the skills nor strength to stay on. In her mind she does but I do not believe she is ready. Therefore I will not put her on anything else until I know she can stay on by herself. Some of my horses take off hard enough even my 11 year old will hit the back of the cantle. That being said she "knows how to ride" and can stay with the horse.
Again though...I think you will see more people using them because they will be viewed as a safety device. Personally I do not believe in them and feel that if you fall off you fall off. Better figure out how to stay on or ride better or ride a less strong horse for your size. Just my personal opinion though, everyone is entitled to there own. |
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  More bootie than waist!
Posts: 18425
          Location: Riding Crackhead. | purplemoon828 - 2015-07-30 7:35 AM I do not believe it will become a trend. I do think that more people will consider using them because more people that have won have been "spotted" riding with them. I have two young daughters, 7 and 11. My youngest is very tiny. I will not use them for her. I am an old school believer of wanting them to learn balance and be able to ride before I put them on a rocket. This is why she is on her spicy lil pony. I have bigger horses but she does not have the skills nor strength to stay on. In her mind she does but I do not believe she is ready. Therefore I will not put her on anything else until I know she can stay on by herself. Some of my horses take off hard enough even my 11 year old will hit the back of the cantle. That being said she "knows how to ride" and can stay with the horse. Again though...I think you will see more people using them because they will be viewed as a safety device. Personally I do not believe in them and feel that if you fall off you fall off. Better figure out how to stay on or ride better or ride a less strong horse for your size. Just my personal opinion though, everyone is entitled to there own.
Excellent response Anne. I agree with you 100% and I love watching your daughters ride and improve.  |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 316
  
| CYA Ranch - 2015-07-30 8:14 AM
purplemoon828 - 2015-07-30 7:35 AM I do not believe it will become a trend. I do think that more people will consider using them because more people that have won have been "spotted" riding with them. I have two young daughters, 7 and 11. My youngest is very tiny. I will not use them for her. I am an old school believer of wanting them to learn balance and be able to ride before I put them on a rocket. This is why she is on her spicy lil pony. I have bigger horses but she does not have the skills nor strength to stay on. In her mind she does but I do not believe she is ready. Therefore I will not put her on anything else until I know she can stay on by herself. Some of my horses take off hard enough even my 11 year old will hit the back of the cantle. That being said she "knows how to ride" and can stay with the horse. Again though...I think you will see more people using them because they will be viewed as a safety device. Personally I do not believe in them and feel that if you fall off you fall off. Better figure out how to stay on or ride better or ride a less strong horse for your size. Just my personal opinion though, everyone is entitled to there own.
Β Excellent response Anne.Β I agree with you 100% and I love watching your daughters ride and improve.Β 
Agreed ^ Protect your child by putting them on a horse they can handle without the use of this. |
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 Own It and Move On
      Location: The edge of no where | Tatum2 - 2015-07-30 8:20 AM CYA Ranch - 2015-07-30 8:14 AM purplemoon828 - 2015-07-30 7:35 AM I do not believe it will become a trend. I do think that more people will consider using them because more people that have won have been "spotted" riding with them. I have two young daughters, 7 and 11. My youngest is very tiny. I will not use them for her. I am an old school believer of wanting them to learn balance and be able to ride before I put them on a rocket. This is why she is on her spicy lil pony. I have bigger horses but she does not have the skills nor strength to stay on. In her mind she does but I do not believe she is ready. Therefore I will not put her on anything else until I know she can stay on by herself. Some of my horses take off hard enough even my 11 year old will hit the back of the cantle. That being said she "knows how to ride" and can stay with the horse. Again though...I think you will see more people using them because they will be viewed as a safety device. Personally I do not believe in them and feel that if you fall off you fall off. Better figure out how to stay on or ride better or ride a less strong horse for your size. Just my personal opinion though, everyone is entitled to there own. Excellent response Anne. I agree with you 100% and I love watching your daughters ride and improve.  Agreed ^ Protect your child by putting them on a horse they can handle without the use of this.
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 Own It and Move On
      Location: The edge of no where | http://www.horsecollaborative.com/meet-irelands-next-pre-teen-prodi...
This is a great example of why I think starting kids out on smaller horses is a great idea....With the balance and timing this kid will be a contender.
JMHO - but if you can't stay where you need to without a magic seat, then go back to the basics and build core strength and balance. It's a shortcut.
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Red Bull Agressive
Posts: 5981
         Location: North Dakota | As much as I believe 100% in learning to ride CORRECTLY and my deep belief that EVERYONE should have dressage lessons at some point in their life, I don't have a problem with little kids using the magic seats to run. Even some of the teens are so small and skinny, I don't know how they would manage to keep themselves seated. As long as it's used as a tool and not a crutch, it doesn't really bother me. |
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Elite Veteran
Posts: 1131
  
| I sure hope not. Rubber bands are not the same thing as MS. I use rubber bands simply because I'd rather focus on my cues than getting my stirrups back at every turn. Every time they have ever needed to, they have broken without a second thought (heck I have broke them running home before. haha). Magic Seat actually ties you to the horse. If that horse falls down, how are you going to unstick yourself from the downed horse? The MS I've seen have STRONG velcro, and honestly, I could see a SMALL child not break the strength of some of them and get hung up on the horse.
I'm just a pessimist though, so what do I know.  |
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I AM being nice
Posts: 4396
        Location: MD | Quite honestly, the kids winning the big shows in the MS is not something that just started happening.... |
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