well using a saddle while ridding is a lot safer than riding bareback (saddle). for beginners, they use a western saddle because of the horn. if your horse or what ever your ridding rears you can hold on with that.
He is from queens, New York but lives in New Jersey.
from what i understand the seat on a evening saddle is deeper than a jumping saddle and the back of a evening saddle is not as flat as a jumping saddle.
yes because the original saddle club has to move on with their lives
It dosent
The main difference is that a Western saddle has a horn, while an English saddle does not.
he lives in New Jersey Saddle River
no, he lives in Atlanta; Georgia
He lives in Saddle River, New Jersey
A wide saddle is used for a horse with a heavy build such as a draft cross of some sort. A regular saddle is the most common as it fits most lightly built horses.
I had that problem once but the thing is you can't make one you have to a dudgeon and loot a saddle.
Sophie bennet lives in trano in Canada
Well any type of saddle can be treeless. Typically a english saddle will be made with a spring tree to offer support and comfort. Treeless saddles can be tricky to fit sometimes, but then so can any saddle in general.