Mavis Cluttergusset
Well-Known Member
Don't see how any instructor, however good they are can make you better if they are sat on your horse.
Surely the owner needs to ride it to improve, otherwise we'd all be Mary King just by watching her go round Badminton.
I disagree - my instructor has sat on my horse several times, because I am keen to work with my horse and improve as a partnership. My instructor needs to know how my horse goes (in my opinion) to best judge how to teach me to get the best out of her. If that means I am paying her to ride for 20% of my lesson then so be it - after she's ridden, I can feel how my horse 'should' feel and can work to achieve that feel myself (which must be working as we have improved a great deal in the 6 months she has been teaching me). I feel a lot better about my riding since having lessons with my current instructor, I have tried others who don't create a similar feeling of confidence, so I don't go back.
It's about finding someone who suits you. Just because someone is popular doesn't make them right for you, my instructor shamelessly laughs at me at times, but only because I take the p*** out of myself. I always finish my lesson feeling positive about my riding, and wanting to work hard to improve.
I have walked straight out of a lesson before (in front of several other pupils in the same enormous group gridwork session), which was singularly the most humiliating experience of my whole life and which no doubt made me quite unpopular with a large section of the 'grass roots' horsey community in my area, but I am damned if I am going to pay someone to spout **** at me and belittle me, just because they are popular. I want an instructor who can actually ride to a good standard, who knows her stuff yet at the same time is a good communicator, a good teacher and someone who can get the best from me whilst building my self belief. It took a while to find mine - and I thought she sounded 'too good' for me at first - but you need to keep looking, they are out there! Good luck!