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  • We had a bad experience there last weekend. The horse behind my 8 year old daughter kept biting her horse's backside. The leader failed to deal with this problem despite this issue being brought to her attention. She failed to teach the woman on the horse (who was doing the biting) how to check her horse and keep a safe distance from my daughters horse. My daughter nearly fell off into some jagged rocks when her horse started bucking and rearing in response to being bitten the third time. I moved my horse up in line to be in front of the biting horse AND taught the woman how to check her horse so that it couldn't tailgate or bite my horse. Overall - a pretty dangerous experience. My recommendations to Ponderosa would be: 1) while each rider is mounting give them individual instructions on how to control their horse. How to stop, turn, go uphill, downhill etc. Our leader gave us instructions after we were all mounted. I was the 6th horse in line and I couldn't hear a thing she said. The little kids at the front of the line were not paying attention. 2) limit the number of children under the age of 8 on individual trail rides. Of the 11 people on this ride - 4 were under the age of 8. The kids had no idea how to control their horses. Our 1 hour trail ride took 2 hours due to numerous stops (mostly to get their feet back in their stirrups) 3) I am not sure why a 4 year old was sitting on his mothers lap...they call this a tandem ride. I thought I read on the website that no children under the age of 6 were allowed on trail rides. The mother had never been on a horse before and seemed perplexed by the idea that she was responsible for controlling her horse. Another woman on the ride told me that she thought the horses would be strung together by a rope so that they could not run off. Which brings me to my last recommendation: 4) Tell people that they are responsible for controlling their horse. Going on a trail ride is not the same as riding a horse on a carousel.
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