charterline
Well-Known Member
Any ideas!!! Back, teeth and saddle all checked and fine, and 95% sure no vet issues (had enough crocked horses to have a pretty good idea when vet is required!)
Horse likes to chuck all sorts of evasions at me when we are doing flatwork. One of the latest tactics (and is recurring in between others!), is to trot at whatever speed we want, generally increasing as we go along. "Normal" aids don't really help much, half halting, sitting to the trot, slowing rising down, horse just keeps on going at the speed he feels like. Does it both bitted and Bitless.
I would generally "leave" a horses head alone in a scenario like this, but this doesn't work, horse uses head and neck as a brace and to run through the bridle, so it is a necessity to ask the horse to soften through the neck.
Today's response to the asking for a better rhythm and softness was to stick head in the air and canter off. So I thought if horse wants to canter it can. So we cantered around the school for at least 20 minutes. Horse decides he's had enough of cantering so started trotting, I then asked for another lap of canter, and the did some trot work, which was massively improved on the first attempt.
I've got a lesson at the weekend which I'm going to work on this issue, and see what my instructor thinks. I really don't know what to do with the horse, apart from maybe trying draw reins for a couple of sessions to help him learn that head and neck are not there for a brace, or to give him a good canter before we do any proper work
Horse likes to chuck all sorts of evasions at me when we are doing flatwork. One of the latest tactics (and is recurring in between others!), is to trot at whatever speed we want, generally increasing as we go along. "Normal" aids don't really help much, half halting, sitting to the trot, slowing rising down, horse just keeps on going at the speed he feels like. Does it both bitted and Bitless.
I would generally "leave" a horses head alone in a scenario like this, but this doesn't work, horse uses head and neck as a brace and to run through the bridle, so it is a necessity to ask the horse to soften through the neck.
Today's response to the asking for a better rhythm and softness was to stick head in the air and canter off. So I thought if horse wants to canter it can. So we cantered around the school for at least 20 minutes. Horse decides he's had enough of cantering so started trotting, I then asked for another lap of canter, and the did some trot work, which was massively improved on the first attempt.
I've got a lesson at the weekend which I'm going to work on this issue, and see what my instructor thinks. I really don't know what to do with the horse, apart from maybe trying draw reins for a couple of sessions to help him learn that head and neck are not there for a brace, or to give him a good canter before we do any proper work