Chickshunt2 said:
Thank You for the info! I'll have to look up your site. The saddle it fully carved just not flowers lol I might be a girl but I'm not that girlie...I'm going to be looking into another saddle within a year to fit my big guy. I know I would like something western and with a wade type seat,deep,centered,etc. I just need to drop as much weight off of it as I can. I would like to do LD rides with him and as you said why make him carry that much more weight? The thing I find hard with him is that he is a percheron so he has a wide, short back when you start taking away skirting I loose weight distribution. I'm still waiting on him to stop growing for now and once he does I can't wait to mold his back. It will be fun finding something to fit him I'm sure.
The bars of the tree are going to carry 99% of the weight, so unless you get bars that are wider or longer or both, you really aren't going to change anything, in my opinion. And if the bars are wider, then they will "spread" you out more and not be comfortable to ride.
By the way, unless you want to be right up against the fork of a swellfork saddle, there is no difference between the feel of a slickfork and a swellfork. What makes a saddle feel narrower is a good job on the ground seat to match a certain body type.
When you buy one off the rack, your getting one that is supposed to fit the average person, or at least what that company thinks is the average person. When you get a custom built one, your getting one made just for you.
When you get the back mold on your horsae, is he going to stay the same weight for the rest of his life? If not, then your saddle is only going to match his back when he is at that exact same weight and size.
My horses backs change quite a bit from when they are soft in the spring to rode down hard in the fall. And also as they age. Make a match when they are fat and young and it's ain't going to be the same when they are old and thinner.
We just have to shoot at averages and then pad accordingly.
That's why I like the foam trees, tho' I build them on wood and rawhide also, but the great thing about these "foam" trees is that they have a bit more give and seem to almost custom fit a wide variety of backs.
I built one for a young feller who was worried about the crap he was going to get from his friends about his "plastic" tree. I told him to ask them what they use to rope with. If they aren't using a rawhide reata, then he should tell them to stick it!
I like "traditonal" but most people aren't as traditonal as they really think. If we all stayed treaditional, we'd still be riding saddles like the very first ones invented and there wouldn't be any stirrups. :wink:
And we'd still be riding the horses that were built like they were hundreds of years ago.
