j1ffy
Well-Known Member
Apart from the weirdness in the middle, this has been a very interesting thread. Thank you kate2323 for kicking off a great discussion on training and contact...even if this wasn't quite your aim 
The contact piece is interesting. In Hong Kong, I was trained by a classical German trainer who taught me about steady, but quite firm, contact with an emphasis on everything being smooth ("you must be clear and firm BUT SMOOTHLY" as my horse went bucking across the arena...
).
Mid-way through my lessons with him, I headed to Spain and had a couple of lessons on my trainer's schoolmaster. Said trainer is very 'classical' in the way the term is used these days in the UK - lots of in-hand work, no gadgets and Iberian horses trained for doma vaquera as well as classical dressage. I thought I'd need to lighten my hands compared to the German style and it was a disaster! Spanish trainer was yelling at me "Contact!! No clack clack clack!!" Exactly as others have said - the 'light' contact was actually very unstable and distracting for the horse.
I pulled up and asked the trainer to take the other end of the reins so I could feel his usual contact and it was far stronger than it looked from the ground. He rides predominantly from his seat yet still expects that submission and often complains that north European horses 'have no mouth' (he is often sent horses to improve their piaffe and passage).
Fun Times - don't worry, you're not the thread killer but I usually am so apologies in advance!
The contact piece is interesting. In Hong Kong, I was trained by a classical German trainer who taught me about steady, but quite firm, contact with an emphasis on everything being smooth ("you must be clear and firm BUT SMOOTHLY" as my horse went bucking across the arena...
Mid-way through my lessons with him, I headed to Spain and had a couple of lessons on my trainer's schoolmaster. Said trainer is very 'classical' in the way the term is used these days in the UK - lots of in-hand work, no gadgets and Iberian horses trained for doma vaquera as well as classical dressage. I thought I'd need to lighten my hands compared to the German style and it was a disaster! Spanish trainer was yelling at me "Contact!! No clack clack clack!!" Exactly as others have said - the 'light' contact was actually very unstable and distracting for the horse.
I pulled up and asked the trainer to take the other end of the reins so I could feel his usual contact and it was far stronger than it looked from the ground. He rides predominantly from his seat yet still expects that submission and often complains that north European horses 'have no mouth' (he is often sent horses to improve their piaffe and passage).
Fun Times - don't worry, you're not the thread killer but I usually am so apologies in advance!