PartlyPickled
Well-Known Member
Hi, i'm hopeless with this sort of stuff, but how many human strides do you reckon would be in
between this 3 stride (i think) grid? i will try and upload the video also, thank you x
Hi, i'm hopeless with this sort of stuff, but how many human strides do you reckon would be inbetween this 3 stride (i think) grid? i will try and upload the video also, thank you x![]()
4 human steps for one horse stride, with 2 steps for take off before the jump and 2 steps after for landing is normal set up for average horse. As you have 2 strides in between jumps there would be 12 people steps between the poles - for an average horse![]()
I'd also like to add that just talking about number of human strides can be very misleading. Humans have different stride lengths so how your own stride lenght fits with the standard has to ne known. The best way to do this is to go to a few BS comps and walk the doubles in your own normal stride. make sure you dont change your stride from your normal walk.
What you will find is a) your normal stride matches the standard (very rare), b) you walk 9 strides for double so you have a shorter stride than the standard or c) you walk less than 8 strides for the double in which case your stride is longer than the standard. Mine is 7.5 strides for a normal double.
Knowing your won striding is very important for one simple reason. Most folks set up their jumps at home using the stardard 8, 12 etc. If they have a shorter or longer lenght of stride than the standard they will be schooling their horses over distances that will be different to the ones they get at comps. If you generally find the distances at comps to be short or long when you ride them it is probably because you have not allowed for your own stride difference.
That assumes you have 12' poles, be careful not to do this if you have 10' poles of anything else. Normal single stride distance for a double is just over 24' which works fine with the BS standard 12'.Tim Stockdale walks the length of a showjumping pole which is same as one horse length. Its a good way of telling how many of your strides it takes to place a pole at the correct distance for an average horse stride. Saw him do it at a demo the other night. Was interesting
It's a two stride grid. Impossible to tell the distances of that particular grid, can you not ask the person who set it up?