High Plains Saddle Fitting, JH-C LLC

High Plains Saddle Fitting, JH-C LLC English Saddle Fitting in Cowboy Country.

06/10/2026

Just a quick video on a couple ways that I check that the angle of the tree point of the saddle matches the angle of the area of the horse’s back 2 fingers behind the back of the scapula. I removed the Velcro blocks to give you a better view. I also used my wooden templates to cross reference the tracings, and they both look perfect! Do you know how to locate your tree point?

This. The compensations from issues in the hind end so often happens in their bodies. Think about how we tend to cave in...
06/07/2026

This. The compensations from issues in the hind end so often happens in their bodies. Think about how we tend to cave in on one side of our ribcage when we ride that is often a result of an assymetry in our pelvis. We see this in horses too. Food for thought!

The Great Saddle Slip Mystery🔍

Your saddle slips to the left.

So naturally, you buy a new girth.

It still slips.🤨

So you buy a fancy anatomical girth, a non-slip saddle pad, and perhaps a breastplate with enough straps to secure a small aircraft.

It still slips.😠

So you call a saddle fitter.

Then another saddle fitter.

Then one recommended by a friend who swears they transformed her horse's life.

It still slips.😖

At this point, many horse owners begin to suspect that they're somehow destined to spend the rest of their life searching for the mythical saddle setup that stays exactly where it should.

But before you spend another dollar on tack or lose respect for your latest saddle-fitter, let me tell you about some fascinating research by Line Greve and Sue Dyson.🤓

Because what they discovered put some very important information on the table to consider when you have a saddle slip issue.

The researchers investigated horses with persistent saddle slip and found that many of them had underlying hindlimb lameness.

Now, stay with me if you just rolled your eyes and think this isn't you case because your horse is clearly NOT lame....

The type of lameness identified was not the obvious kind where the horse is hopping around on three legs.

The subtle kind.🤔

The sort of issue that can quietly affect performance, behaviour, balance, and movement long before anyone recognises it as a soundness problem.

Why?

Because horses with discomfort or dysfunction or weakness in a hind leg often alter the way they move. They redistribute load, change how they push off the ground, and compensate through their body. Those altered forces travel through the horse's back and can gradually push the saddle off centre.

This doesn't just apply to horses with obvious injuries. It can occur in horses with mild lameness, asymmetries, weakness, developmental immaturity, or conditions affecting structures such as the stifle, sacroiliac region, suspensory apparatus, or other parts of the hind limb.

Now here's the part that many people find surprising.

The researchers found that saddle slip was actually associated with well-balanced saddles that had even contact and good flocking.😲

In other words, a saddle that slips isn't necessarily poorly fitted.

In fact, if you've had the saddle checked, adjusted, reflocked, replaced, and the problem keeps returning, there may be something else worth investigating.

The most compelling finding came when the researchers identified the source of the hindlimb pain and used diagnostic nerve blocks to remove the discomfort.

The saddle slip disappeared in 97% of cases.😱

Read that again.

Ninety-seven percent.😱

The saddle didn't change.

The girth didn't change.

The saddle pad didn't change.

The horse's movement changed.🤯

That's a pretty powerful clue.😎

One of the biggest challenges with horses is that we often focus on the symptom we can see rather than the cause we can't.

The slipping saddle becomes the problem.

The canter transition becomes the problem.

The spooky behaviour becomes the problem.

The horse drifting through the shoulder becomes the problem.

But sometimes these things are not separate problems at all.

Sometimes they are all clues pointing towards the same underlying issue.

So if your saddle consistently slips despite multiple fitting assessments and equipment changes, it may be worth considering whether your horse is trying to tell you something.

And if that saddle slip is accompanied by things like:
- Canter difficulties
- Resistance under saddle
- Reactive or spooky behaviour
- Struggles with engagement
then the possibility of an underlying soundness issue becomes even more important to investigate.⚠️

One of the most valuable lessons I've learned working with horses is that behaviour, performance, and movement are often connected in ways that aren't immediately obvious.

A slipping saddle may not always indicate a soundness issue...sometimes it can be a YOU issue, but that is for another article another day.

But if it keeps happening despite your best efforts to fix it, it might be worth looking beyond the saddle.💡

Sometimes the saddle is not the problem.

It's the clue.

References
Greve, L., & Dyson, S. J. (2013). An Investigation of the Relationship Between Hindlimb Lameness and Saddle Slip. Equine Veterinary Journal, 45(5), 570-577.
Greve, L., & Dyson, S. J. (2014). The Interrelationship of Lameness, Saddle Slip and Back Shape in the General Sports Horse Population. Equine Veterinary Journal, 46(6), 687-694.

Collectable Advice 226/365. Please SHARE or hit SAVE. Please no copy and pasting.

05/30/2026

Hang out with me while I narrow this tree for this horse. I dropped the panels and used one of my templates to cross reference the angle/width, then put it on my tree press. I decided to use the press to get halfway to where we needed to be, then felted the tree points to get us the rest of the way, because I am quite sure that the horse is going to fill out as it is ridden in a saddle that fits it, and it is easier to remove the felt than it is the widen the tree. Also, a tree only has a limited number of times that it can be pressed, so I want to avoid doing so more times than it needs to be done.

DEMO SALE!!!17.5 W Jeffries GP On their XP treeGreat for horses with a wither but a straight backOnly been girthed up a ...
05/28/2026

DEMO SALE!!!
17.5 W Jeffries GP
On their XP tree
Great for horses with a wither but a straight back
Only been girthed up a couple times
Wool flocked
Great all round saddle
$1265 Includes shipping within US
I accept Venmo, PayPal, or can send an invoice via Square

DEMO SALE!!!17.5 GFS Monarch CobFor the widelings!This saddle has a super wide channel for those “kegs on legs” types. F...
05/28/2026

DEMO SALE!!!
17.5 GFS Monarch Cob
For the widelings!
This saddle has a super wide channel for those “kegs on legs” types.
Full leather adjustable saddle, goes up to a 4x.
Flocked with siliconized synthetic wool.
Velcro blocks allow you to move them where you need them.
5 different billeting options.
Brand new, never been girthed up.
$2265 includes shipping within the US.
I accept Venmo, PayPal, or can send an invoice via Square.

05/28/2026

An area Boy Scout Camp had me out yesterday to learn all about saddle fitting and some troubleshooting tips to help better fit the camp’s trail horses to keep them comfortable. What an eager group of young adults! 🌈⭐️ 📚

Nothing like a little last minute event invite! For those in the Omaha area interested in joining the Omaha Stockyards c...
05/28/2026

Nothing like a little last minute event invite! For those in the Omaha area interested in joining the Omaha Stockyards community for an evening to learn all about saddle fitting, join us! Thursday May 28th from 6-8pm. Bring a folding chair, and we’ll get into it!

DEMO SALE!!!17.5” GFS Apex DressageAdjustable saddle made for a horse with a high witherFull leatherExtra deep panels fl...
05/25/2026

DEMO SALE!!!
17.5” GFS Apex Dressage
Adjustable saddle made for a horse with a high wither
Full leather
Extra deep panels flocked with synthetic siliconized wool for increased bearing surface and greater wither clearance
3 billeting options
Velcro blocks allow you to place them where you need them
Happy to put whichever size gullet bar you need, currently in a W
$2175 includes shipping within US
I accept Venmo, PayPal, or can send an invoice via Square

DEMO SALE!!!18” GFS Monarch JumpFull leather adjustable saddleFlocked with synthetic siliconized woolVelcro blocks allow...
05/25/2026

DEMO SALE!!!
18” GFS Monarch Jump
Full leather adjustable saddle
Flocked with synthetic siliconized wool
Velcro blocks allow you to move them where you need them
Easily moveable billet positions to fit the girth to your horse’s confirmation
Happy to put whichever size gullet bar you need, currently has a W
$1875 includes shipping within US
I accept Venmo, PayPal, or can send an invoice via Square

DEMO SALE!!!17” GFS Monarch JumpAdjustable full leather saddle, happy to put whichever size gullet bar you need to fit y...
05/25/2026

DEMO SALE!!!
17” GFS Monarch Jump
Adjustable full leather saddle, happy to put whichever size gullet bar you need to fit your horse. Currently has a W bar.
Synthetic flocking has been replaced with real wool.
Velcro blocks allows you to move them where you would like them.
Billets that are easily moveable to 5 different places to fit the girth to your horse’s confirmation.
$1875 includes shipping within the US.
I accept Venmo, PayPal, or can send an invoice via Square.

Address

Omaha, NE
68112

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