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Showing posts with label walk to trot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label walk to trot. Show all posts

Thursday, 17 February 2011

The Other Way of Turning

Most riders feel as if they should leave the school puffing and sweating. If you’re not pushing and tweaking, checking and flexing you’re not trying hard enough, right?

Wrong! If you were a horse what would you prefer? Someone who sat still, allowed you to do your job with minimal interference or someone who felt they had to hold your hoof every step of the way?

Horses are unbelievably sensitive. Your slightest move can alter things dramatically. Think how hysterical they get if a fly, which is a millionth of their size, dares to land on them. You’ll be surprised how little you have to do to have an affect.

If you’ve read The Other Way of Stopping (see popular posts) you’ll know how to stop and collect your horse without using your hand. If you’ve read Be a Lazy Rider (December 2010) you’ll know how to get your horse to go forward with less leg from you. This is The Other Way of Turning.

Try this.

In walk ride large round the school. Have a contact but keep your horse’s head straight in front of you. On the long side turn your head to look directly across the school.

Now turn your upper body – your shoulders and your hips - to the inside. Your outside shoulder and hip should be further forward than your inside.

Concentrate on keeping your shoulders above your hips and your weight on your seat so you stay balanced.

Keep your body in this position and wait for your horse’s response. It may take him a few strides to start with but all horses have the same reaction. They’ll turn to the inside. If you stay in this position you’ll find he comes round in a complete circle.

Try the same from the centre line. In walk ride down the centre line and turn your upper body and your head to the left or right. Stay in that position until you’ve ridden a complete circle and continue down the centre line.

To change the rein from E to B turn to the inside to get off the track at E and straighten your body when you’re facing B. Your horse will straighten up too. Ride across the school and use your body to tell him which way you want to go at B.

The more you practice the more you’ll achieve. The angle that you turn your body tells your horse how tight to turn. You can make him do a 10m or a 20m circle just by changing the angle of your body. Try riding a serpentine only using your upper body. You’ll be surprised how much you can do without using your leg or hand.

Once your horse starts to pick up what you’re doing he’ll really start to listen to you. It’s amazing to think by doing so little you can have such an effect. Bear this in mind the next time your canter is crooked or your halt isn’t quite square. Are you sure your horse is at fault?

It’s true that the more you can do to help him the better. Just remember that sometimes less is more. Have fun.

Saturday, 12 February 2011

A Pain in the Neck?

Is your horse a tortoise or a giraffe?

Giraffes, as most riders know, have telescopic necks. They get their heads way above the angle of control making steering and stopping almost impossible.
Tortoises, like their namesakes, have an incredible ability to contract their necks right back into their bodies and set themselves. They’ll set their necks, stick their ears up your nostrils and plough on regardless of any pulling and flapping you may do.

Giraffe or tortoise, your horse is doing this for one reason. To avoid your contact. The cause of it could be many things but it’s most likely to stem from discomfort. Make sure you aren’t the cause of the problem.

Become more aware of your hands when you ride. In rising trot do your hands stay still or do they go up and down with you? Do you pull back every time you use your legs? You may not mean to do any of these things but over time your horse learns to avoid the pressure they cause. Keeping your elbow bent and your fingers moving will keep your hands as soft and relaxed as possible.

There are a million gadgets on the market which offer a quick fix but many of them don’t actually solve the problem. Many slide through the bit so the horse can’t lean bringing his head down and in. That’s all very pretty but the second you remove the gadget up pops his head again. You need something which allows you to concentrate on your contact.

For a giraffe try a standing martingale. Running martingales are ok but, when your horse resists, the pressure still goes to the bit. The only pressure from a standing martingale is to his nose. Ride forward from your leg into a steady but soft contact (keep your fingers moving). Be patient. He’ll accept the contact and relax his neck.

In time you can lengthen the martingale so it’s only there for emergencies. Eventually you’ll be able to do without it altogether.

No gadget or martingale works with a tortoise. You’ll never win a battle of strength but in a battle of wits you have the trump card. You are more intelligent and you know what he’s going to do.

Tortoises have a habit of shrinking their necks as you go up a pace. Most often from walk to trot. Before you trot the walk probably feels soft and submissive. It’s when you ask for it that the softness converts to concrete and the jaw becomes solid.

In walk practice bending his head from the outside to the middle to the inside. Take your time. You’re not swinging his head from side to side. You’re turning his head and neck one way and then the other to stop him setting his muscles. Take three strides to bend him to the outside, three to bring him back to the centre and three to take him to the inside. Use the leg on the side you are turning towards to stop him turning his body. Put your other leg back to stop him swinging his quarters out. He’s a master of evasion so cover all options!

To start with he’ll still try to set his neck. Keep turning his head from side to side and he can’t. If you have to take your hand away from his neck to turn his head then do it. Stay calm even when he’s not. A tug or yank at this stage will just remind him why he started all this in the first place!

Once you’re able to do this without too much of a fight ask for trot. Ask as his head’s turned to the outside. It may take a few strides because he’ll think you’ve gone crazy but you’ll find he won’t be able to shrink back into his shell when you’re bending him one way and then the other.

Once you’re in trot relax but be ready. The second he tries to set his neck bend him to the outside.

These methods may not be ideal for a dressage test but they’re there to break a habit. They’re useful and kinder than many gadgets claim to be. Whether it’s a giraffe or a tortoise you have on your hands there’s only one way to change them and that’s practice and patience. Keep calm, stay consistent and soon you’ll have a horse with a neck that bends the right way! Good luck.