Thursday, 24 April 2025

Edix Ishya

 I'm beyond over this whole 'find a permanant saddle for the yellow pony' journey. So, right up front let me say this saddle is lovely and a solid choice. I think I'm extra grouchy and fussy and currently incapable of being too excited about new saddles ;)

I've settled on an Edix Ishya. If you're not familiar with the brand, don't worry, neither was I at first. Like so many horsey things, a friend of a friend was using one and put the idea in my head. At that point everything they sold was treeless and I wasn't sure that was an answer for my particular concerns. 

Then, recently a visiting clinician had a new treed model and let me have a sit in it. Miracle of miracles, the standard set up fit me just fine. That rarely happens - I am not a tall person and more modern styled dressage saddles almost always mean my knee ends up jammed in the block and the flap ends at my ankle.

Images from the Edix website. I love the brown most, but the trial version was black and I'm not messing with what worked ;)

                               

I associate the company more with treeless saddles, but this one is advertised as a 'flexible tree'. I wasn't sure how Sophie would feel about that, but it rides very much like other synthetic trees to me. There is plenty of structure and just a bit of flex. It has changeable gullet bars, changeable blocks, I'm told even the panels can be changed out to a different shape or moved to make the gullet wider or narrower (and are wool flocked). Even the stirrup bars are adjustable, again a win for those of us who aren't average height.  All that felt positive for me. Looking forward let's hope it's also suitable for some growing cob boys in a year or three.


Real life version on Sophie.

Likes: 

- As above, all the adjustability for pony fit. I feel like this gives me options and that's necessary when I live in a bit of a saddle fitting/trying desert. Adjustable blocks for me are a win too...you'd think you'd just need to set them up for yourself once, but I had a saddle once I absolutely loved on Bridget, then on Sophie's rounder shape the blocks did weird things where my knees wanted to be and I hated it.

- Is quite compact, but still has some width to the panels - ideal for shorter backed ponies. 

- Feels/looks like a quality saddle for the price (around 4k CAD new).

- Sophie is nowhere near the widest gullet plate, we're quite comfortably in the middle of the range. She's often in the top end of regular saddle widths, but not wide or flat enough for the cob or wide saddle ranges. It's nice to be average for once.

Next up, we need to tackle bridle fit and the not cob, but also not horse sized dilemma.

Not sure/if I'm being as fussy as Princess Pony:

- In general, a bit "more" saddle than I like. I think in my heart I'm an old school saddle girl and would rather have closer contact than lots of cushion and big blocks.

- For me, the twist feels about as wide as I'd be comfortable with. I get that wanting super close contact AND a narrower twist on a wide pony isn't a thing though. Like the above comment re: blocks, twist is obviously a personal preference thing.

- The cantle is super high. My hips aren't overly pleased, I may need a taller mounting block. Dislike cause that makes me feel old ;)

-No keeper or space to tuck stirrup leather tails. I think it's expected you'd use the webber or mono leathers, which honestly aren't my personal preference.

Is it really going to work? Will we find out in a month or two that she's annoyed in new and interesting ways? Stay tuned, I guess :D

So far, she started tolerant the first ride (which is a win in itself with this mare) and is now feeling happier every ride - her main complaint is now that her (sheepskin!) girth is 'itchy'. So I'm cautiously optimistic.






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