And the longer you ride the longer all of the riders weight is directly on 3-4 inches of the horses back. Not distributed along the full weight bearing surface of the back
I am thinking its either gonna bridge for a lightweight rider, or sink in the middle for a heavy,,, Maybe a narrow range its just right. I do know a handful of riders that do very well in boz saddles for 100 mile endurance. They are probably around 150-160 lbs
initially i think it would slow it a lot... but as u know leather relaxes over time... now unless u did some SERIOUS breaking in of the leather before hand to make it soft... it just depends how mush the rider rides at least thats how i see this working
....and how long will this tree last before it begins to break down?
And the longer you ride the longer all of the riders weight is directly on 3-4 inches of the horses back. Not distributed along the full weight bearing surface of the back
I am thinking its either gonna bridge for a lightweight rider, or sink in the middle for a heavy,,, Maybe a narrow range its just right. I do know a handful of riders that do very well in boz saddles for 100 mile endurance. They are probably around 150-160 lbs
now much does the leather slow the tree materials recovery and initial flexion?
initially i think it would slow it a lot... but as u know leather relaxes over time... now unless u did some SERIOUS breaking in of the leather before hand to make it soft... it just depends how mush the rider rides
at least thats how i see this working
I really like this video...thanks Boz.
Hi Boz, what is the material use in the tree? THANKS!
Will it hold screws and nails and will it spread when you do your winch up
Tienes actualmente disponible para la Venta saddle tree?
traditional saddles, made of wood, were soft fixed together, to allow, guess what, flexing. So nothing new here really. Just materials.
What does "soft fixed together" mean?