Sussexbythesea
Well-Known Member
Slow controlled cantering on poorer ground e.g. hard or a bit stony or a bit boggy (not roads) have more impact than a good working trot?
I must admit to a teeny canter here and there (around a hundred metres or so) on ground I would normally not canter on because the rain has either turned paths into mud or washed all the surface away.
It's lovely to feel a canter rather than a trot and my boy gets a bit excited at the thought I think he is missing canter too
It doesn't feel like he's pounding himself in fact it feels less impact than a trot.
Thoughts?
I must admit to a teeny canter here and there (around a hundred metres or so) on ground I would normally not canter on because the rain has either turned paths into mud or washed all the surface away.
It's lovely to feel a canter rather than a trot and my boy gets a bit excited at the thought I think he is missing canter too
Thoughts?