Anonymous wrote:As a horsey person, I hate that this is a thing. It is a way to make money off people who don't know anything about horses, but it is terrible for the horses themselves.
Riding a horse on deep sand is horrific for the horse's legs. This is NOT the same as riding in a carefully manicured arena that uses shallow sand. Deep sand causes the horse's fetlocks to move in ways they wouldn't normally move, and forcing a horse to do this every day for hours is going to cause injuries. Especially if the horse is "ridden" by people who are inexperienced riders, and will be sawing at the horse's mouth and shifting their weight all over the place as they attempt to balance themselves. The horses used for these tourist trap money pits will be placid, older animals that are gentle enough to take daily the daily abuse of trudging through deep beach sand while carrying inexperienced riders, and it will break the horses down quickly. Nobody cares about the horses themselves: they will forced to keep going when they develop wind puffs and other injuries, and discarded when they finally succumb to the inevitable, more serious injury.
And all the while, the tourists are thinking about how "romantic" it is to be riding a horse on the beach.
I've seen various such horses/riders on various beaches, and I can always see the results on the horses' legs (which are NOT apparent to people who don't know horses: to you, everything looks fine).
I hate the owners of these horrible enterprises. If you care about horses, do NOT do this kind of thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did the Sea Island beach horse back riding with my 3 daughters (ages 10-16) about 4 years ago. Absolutely amazing experience for us. I think it’s one of my favorite memories ever. (My 10 year old had never been on a horse before and did fine)
Encouraging to hear! Would you have enjoyed it without kids you think?
Any other activities we should look out for? We are staying at the clositers
The Cloister is one of my favorite resorts in the world. We went when I was growing up, and we’ve taken our own kids there.
When are you going? Summer is prime for most activities, but the beach is gorgeous - and timeless - all year round. Look for sand dollars on the beach early in the morning!
Anonymous wrote:I did it in Costa Rica and it was pretty cool except the horses clearly weren't in very good shape so we felt bad about it. We have been riding before in places where the horses just seemed healtheir and well cared for. Theses were not. Now we try to get more info about a stable before riding.
Anonymous wrote:I did it in Costa Rica and it was pretty cool except the horses clearly weren't in very good shape so we felt bad about it. We have been riding before in places where the horses just seemed healtheir and well cared for. Theses were not. Now we try to get more info about a stable before riding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did the Sea Island beach horse back riding with my 3 daughters (ages 10-16) about 4 years ago. Absolutely amazing experience for us. I think it’s one of my favorite memories ever. (My 10 year old had never been on a horse before and did fine)
Encouraging to hear! Would you have enjoyed it without kids you think?
Any other activities we should look out for? We are staying at the clositers
Anonymous wrote:I did the Sea Island beach horse back riding with my 3 daughters (ages 10-16) about 4 years ago. Absolutely amazing experience for us. I think it’s one of my favorite memories ever. (My 10 year old had never been on a horse before and did fine)
Anonymous wrote:A 2 mile ride isn't going to take you 90 minutes.
While mounted, a horse is going to walk a little faster than a person walking at a normal/decent pace. 2 miles is 30 minutes, tops.