Laser Saddle Cover
|
|
Laser Quarter Sheet
This eloquent wool skirt is also a quarter sheet! No more stopping to get off your horse to remove a quarter sheet when your warm up is complete. Just un-velcro the waist and whisk it away. Available in a heavy luxurious wool, and a lighter weight wool for warmer climates. Be elegant and practical during those chilly days and your horse will appreciate it too. Colors: Black, Gray, Navy, Hunter Green and Burgundy. $189.00 w/out embroidery/$209.00 with embroidery.

| Click for larger pictures. |
Laser Reins
|
|
|
Laser reins come in both cob and full-size and either black or dark brown. Notched leather reins are available in 1/2" and 5/8" widths, while the rubber and web reins come in 3/4" widths.
Laser Training Reins
![]() |
![]() |
Our unique Training Reins are the brainchild of our designer, Jeremy
Beale. The idea came to him many years ago as a method of helping
the amateur rider overcome the resistance of a horse that is built
upside down with a hollow back and a “ewe” neck. In fact he used
baling twine to create the same effect (which he called “mother’s
helpers”), long before we decided to make the real thing!
These reins are a cross between side reins and a german martingale.
The fact that they are designed to be attached to the girth or
billets at the bottom of the flaps of the saddle, allows the rider
to take full advantage of the sliding effect of the rein, without
the risk of shortening the horse’s neck, as so often happens with
regular draw reins. This enables the horse to stretch over his top
line and learn to look for the bit, thus developing correct
musculature and creating the habit of working over his back.
The reins have a wide range of adjustment and can also be completely
detached at the snap on each end, without dismounting, when the
horse is going comfortably, thus allowing him to be “weaned
gradually from them.
They should be adjusted so that there is approximately a four inch
loop in the rider’s rein, when the horse has his head too high with
his nose stuck out and there is a light contact with the snaffle
rein. This creates a running rein effect, which will be alleviated
as soon as he accepts the correct contact and yields to the pressure
from the bit. At this moment the training reins will go slack and
the rider will feel a direct, soft contact through the rein with the
horse’s mouth.
Thus the rider has complete control over the action of this training
aid, without the complication and bulk of using a separate draw rein
and it is totally
unrestrictive.

