DuckToller
Well-Known Member
Have ended up with a very cute, somewhat chubby, little section A chap. He hasn't done much for a few years, but in his youth he was professionally produced and shown in-hand.
We have been lunging him and done some ridden work, but he is having huge problems cantering. When you ask on the lunge he runs faster and faster, looks more like a mini section D with legs going like pistons, and eventually if you bring him back to a slower trot and ask again, he manages a few strides before trotting at high speed.
Under saddle it's even harder, poor little chap will trot for ages but won't offer more than a few strides of canter before he drops back into piston trot.
Is it because he has never really cantered before? Don't know much about lead rein M&M but obviously they only walk and trot. So would he not have been cantered before even on the lunge? Even in the field he only appears to trot about and his conformation is so chunky, he is much heavier than what I thought an a should be, I wonder if he isn't really built to canter!
Am hoping less blubber might help, but just wondering.
We have been lunging him and done some ridden work, but he is having huge problems cantering. When you ask on the lunge he runs faster and faster, looks more like a mini section D with legs going like pistons, and eventually if you bring him back to a slower trot and ask again, he manages a few strides before trotting at high speed.
Under saddle it's even harder, poor little chap will trot for ages but won't offer more than a few strides of canter before he drops back into piston trot.
Is it because he has never really cantered before? Don't know much about lead rein M&M but obviously they only walk and trot. So would he not have been cantered before even on the lunge? Even in the field he only appears to trot about and his conformation is so chunky, he is much heavier than what I thought an a should be, I wonder if he isn't really built to canter!
Am hoping less blubber might help, but just wondering.