Young Horse Essentials: Tack Choices for Starting Under Saddle
Simple, kind, and adaptable gear for a confident start.
Starting a youngster is 80% preparation and 20% "firsts." The right tack keeps sessions clear and comfortable while your horse learns balance, steering, and confidence. Below is a practical kit list with fitting tips, what to skip, and how to scale the setup as training progresses.
Principles to ride by
- Keep it simple. Choose the least amount of tack that gives you clarity and stability.
- Fit is welfare. A kind bit and a balanced saddle beat any "training aid."
- Assume change. Young backs and shoulders develop fast-pick adjustable, check fit often.
- Progressive layers. Add items only when a clear need appears (e.g., breastplate for saddle slip).
The core kit (and why)
1. Headcollar + Lunge Cavesson
- Use for: groundwork, long-lining, early lunging without pulling on the mouth.
- Fit tips: Snug enough not to spin; noseband on the bony nasal bridge, not on soft cartilage.
- Why it matters: Protects the mouth while you teach voice commands and straightness.
2. Bridle with a Plain Cavesson
- Bit choice: Start with a smooth snaffle that suits the mouth: usually a double-jointed (lozenge) or anatomical single-joint. Avoid twists/ports.
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Size & fit:
- Width: ~5-7 mm clearance past each lip corner (no pinching).
- Height: 1-2 tiny "wrinkles" at the corner of the mouth, then reassess after a few rides-many youngsters prefer slightly lower once they relax.
- Cavesson: two fingers upright at the front; avoid flashes/drop initially.
- Reins: Grippy rubber with stops-easier for consistent hand position.
3. Saddle (light, balanced, adjustable where possible)
- Tree: A quality synthetic/polymer or modern wood tree with changeable gullet is ideal for a back that will change monthly.
- Panels: Wool-flocked or high-quality foam that can be adjusted/reflocked as muscles develop.
- Style: General Purpose or close-contact jump for most; a simple dressage saddle if that's the pathway. Prioritise a level seat that lets you stay quiet-not a deep, restrictive block.
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Fit checks:
- Spine and wither clearance front-to-back.
- Even panel contact (no rocking/bridging).
- Shoulder freedom-tree points not jamming the scapulae.
- Recheck after 10-12 sessions and every 6-8 weeks during growth spurts.
4. Girth
- Type: Soft, contour or anatomic girth with elastic at both ends for even tension.
- Fit: Two to three holes showing each side; no wrinkling behind the elbows; check hair after work for rubs.
- Material: Smooth leather or quality synthetic that wipes clean (young horses sweat!).
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5. Saddle Pad
- Keep it simple: One breathable, non-bulk pad that doesn't alter fit.
- No shims/fleece unless a fitter recommends them; extra fluff can destabilise a green horse.
6. Safety Stirrups
- Why: First spooks are unpredictable. A quick-release design (side-opening or peacock/covered-arm style) reduces risk.
- Treads: Decent grip; check they're not razor-sharp.
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7. Protective Boots
- Front brushing boots (and overreach boots if the horse forges).
- Fit: Snug but you should slide a finger under; even pressure, no edges digging in.
Useful extras (add when needed)
- Breastplate (simple 3-point or 5-point) if the saddle creeps back on round types. Don't use it to hide poor saddle balance.
- Neck strap or grab strap for rider stability-encourages elastic elbows and prevents "catching" the mouth.
- Roller + surcingle for early long-lining, if you prefer that stage before a saddle.
- Single elastic side-reins for brief, supervised use on the cavesson (not bit) to explain straightness-but only after the horse understands forward and voice commands. Skip gadgets if in doubt.
What to avoid early on
- Tight flash/figure-eight nosebands (can mute feedback you need).
- Severe or novelty bits "for control." Control comes from rhythm and lines, not hardware.
- Bulky half pads that change saddle balance.
- Standing martingales for first rides-restricts natural "find your balance" neck use.
First-month progression (30-40 minute sessions, 4-5×/week)
Note: each horse is different and will need different training structures or timelines, but this guide is just a guideline to use as an idea.
Week 1: Ground rules
- In-hand leading, halt, back, yielding shoulders/quarters from light touches.
- Lunge in cavesson: 10-15 minutes, big circles, calm voice cues.
- Introduce roller or saddle at the walk; girth gradually; short sessions.
Week 2: Long-lining & first mounting block work
- Straight lines and gentle corners on two lines; transitions walk-halt-walk.
- Saddle on for most sessions; flap desensitising; stirrups down to bump gently.
- Lean over at the block, leg pressure "on/off," reward the stand.
Week 3: First sits & steering
- Quiet rider up, neck strap on. Walk off with a ground person.
- Big shapes: 20-m circles, changes of rein; halt-walk transitions from voice + seat.
- 5-8 minutes ridden total, then long-rein to finish.
Week 4: Add trot moments & rhythm
- Jog-trot lines on both reins; ride from leg to soft outside rein.
- Introduce gentle poles in hand or on the lunge for proprioception.
- Keep rides short, interspersed with walking hacks if safe.
Fit & comfort checkpoints (every session)
- Before: Run fingers under the browband, noseband, and girth; check pad lies flat.
- After: Lift the pad and look for even sweat; feel along the back for hot spots.
- Behaviour tells you the truth: tail swish, grinding, crooked stop = revisit fit.
Quick sizing cheat sheet
- Bit width: Lip-to-lip + 5-7 mm each side (less for fixed cheeks).
- Girth length: With correct saddle/girth straps, buckles should sit above the elbow bulge.
- Bridle: Avoid "ponying up" a cob by punching extra holes-choose the size that places buckles near the mid-range.
Budget-smart picks
- Adjustable-gullet GP saddle you can refit through the first year.
- Plain cavesson bridle with quality hardware; upgrade reins first (grip = confidence).
- One good girth + one good pad you keep spotless.
- Safety stirrups + brushing boots-small cost, big peace of mind.
FAQs
Q: My youngster mouths the bit constantly-normal?
A: Exploration is normal. If it escalates to evasion (tongue over/behind), check bit size/height, then teeth and saddle balance before changing designs.
Q: Saddle slips to the left.
A: Common with weak toplines. First, verify fit and rider symmetry; then consider a simple breastplate. Add straightness exercises (long-lining, transitions on straight lines).
Q: When to add a martingale?
A: Only if the horse consistently inverts in a way that compromises safety after balance improves. Fit loosely and review with your coach/fitter.
The takeaway
Start light, fit well, and let the horse learn through rhythm and straight lines. Choose adjustable, breathable, non-restrictive tack; add only what solves a real problem. Comfort today builds confidence tomorrow.
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