After a shocking loss to a Democrat in Alabama, Roy Moore is riding off into the sunset. (The mall is in that direction.) -YT
TheFreaksays...

This guy kept showing up on that horse and he is the shittiest rider possible. Really, it's painful to watch him. If he had an ounce of self awareness he'd understand how bad he looks.

If I was on a trail ride with this guy I'd make him get off the horse and walk it to an enclosed arena where he'd at least be a little safer.

And I feel bad for that horse, getting it's head yanked around with a tom thumb bit like that.

Fairbssays...

he seems to be a phony through and through

can you explain what a tom thumb bit is? would a good rider be able to use one effectively?

TheFreaksaid:

This guy kept showing up on that horse and he is the shittiest rider possible. Really, it's painful to watch him. If he had an ounce of self awareness he'd understand how bad he looks.

If I was on a trail ride with this guy I'd make him get off the horse and walk it to an enclosed arena where he'd at least be a little safer.

And I feel bad for that horse, getting it's head yanked around with a tom thumb bit like that.

TheFreaksays...

I can give you a description of the bit and my opinion.

A Tom Thumb bit is jointed in the middle and has shanks for leverage. So it has a dual action. When light pressure is used it works on the gums and corners of the mouth. When the reigns are pulled harder the jaw is squeezed while the shanks multiply the force and the center joint folds upward to apply pressure to the roof of the mouth. It's kind of like the volume going from 1 to 11.

Uses:
In theory it should act like a traditional Western bit with the added advantage of rotating the shanks independently...so you can make pressure changes on each side of the mouth independently. In actual practice, it pinches the horses lip in this situation and horses tend to react by tossing their head up or holding their head in an unnaturally high position. With a strong pull it becomes extremely severe. Using it requires a very light hand.

I have used a Tom Thumb successfully with a well trained horse that required no head control but had developed a bad habit of testing his rider by picking up his gate and then bolting. The bit allowed me to ride with no hand but when the horse stretched his neck to take control he ran into the bit. When he relaxed back to the correct position, the pressure was gone. Eventually he didn't want to cause his own discomfort and once he'd broken his bad habits the bit wasn't necessary.

In my opinion, the Tom Thumb appears to check a lot of boxes but in reality it does few of them well. It can work for the right horse, with the right rider, in the right circumstances.

Roy is clearly an inexperienced rider and his personality demands that he assert control, even when he's out of his depth. He's riding a gaited horse (I think it's a Tennessee Walker but my daughter disagrees) and he seems to be trying to make it move like a Quarter Horse. My guess is he's trying to ride in like a cowboy but the horse naturally moves like pretty princess horse. Chaos ensues.

I hope that makes sense. I tried to avoid horse-people terms. If something's unclear or if anyone feels I'm wrong, then I welcome comments.

Fairbssaid:

he seems to be a phony through and through

can you explain what a tom thumb bit is? would a good rider be able to use one effectively?

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