JustMe22
Well-Known Member
Hi,
So this is not one of my horses but a friend's who I ride a bit. Hoping to maybe sit on him a bit more over holidays and try and fix some of these issues, because for now it's an occasional thing what with lectures, assignments, my horse and a few jobs.
He's 15 and a Boerperd, and generally a very sweet little horse, doesn't have a nasty bone in his body. Show jumped a bit before he came to his present owner who is focusing mostly on flatwork/dressage at the moment.
However. After canter he tends to get very strong in that he leans on your hands, drops behind the vertical and doesn't want to come back to a slow canter or transition downwards into a trot.
He also does this obscure thing of throwing forward his inside front leg when you do come from a canter to a trot, regardless of how good the transition is otherwise (also does it on the lunge).
He also still over reacts to the leg and shoots away from it and gets very fast and unbalanced if you use too much of it (I think partly because his regular rider doesn't use much leg and he now protests to it
) so I've been doing some lateral work and spiralling to try and get him used to the idea that my leg will stay there regardless of what he does.
I have tried dropping the contact a few times esp in canter but it seems to make little difference to his strongness. There's also the problem of him getting too deep. So I suppose in summary his big issue is that he gets too tank-like especially after cantering, and bringing him back down to a trot/walk is difficult, especially as he then pulls on your hands, ducks behind the bit and just tries to continue at a canter.
So now the logical step would seem to be to get him to take the contact down and forward, right? So that he's working forward into it? He can work on a long rein and initially he gets less tense like this but he doesn't stretch very well. But how can I try and fix the tanking and evading the contact?
I fear this has been very badly phrased...so thank you for reading and any advice welcome!
So this is not one of my horses but a friend's who I ride a bit. Hoping to maybe sit on him a bit more over holidays and try and fix some of these issues, because for now it's an occasional thing what with lectures, assignments, my horse and a few jobs.
He's 15 and a Boerperd, and generally a very sweet little horse, doesn't have a nasty bone in his body. Show jumped a bit before he came to his present owner who is focusing mostly on flatwork/dressage at the moment.
However. After canter he tends to get very strong in that he leans on your hands, drops behind the vertical and doesn't want to come back to a slow canter or transition downwards into a trot.
He also does this obscure thing of throwing forward his inside front leg when you do come from a canter to a trot, regardless of how good the transition is otherwise (also does it on the lunge).
He also still over reacts to the leg and shoots away from it and gets very fast and unbalanced if you use too much of it (I think partly because his regular rider doesn't use much leg and he now protests to it
I have tried dropping the contact a few times esp in canter but it seems to make little difference to his strongness. There's also the problem of him getting too deep. So I suppose in summary his big issue is that he gets too tank-like especially after cantering, and bringing him back down to a trot/walk is difficult, especially as he then pulls on your hands, ducks behind the bit and just tries to continue at a canter.
So now the logical step would seem to be to get him to take the contact down and forward, right? So that he's working forward into it? He can work on a long rein and initially he gets less tense like this but he doesn't stretch very well. But how can I try and fix the tanking and evading the contact?
I fear this has been very badly phrased...so thank you for reading and any advice welcome!