Trolt
Well-Known Member
On the whole, it looks good! It sometimes seems like it isn't flowing well though, like, you seem to ask him to take off, and he chips in an awkward stride and you seem to have a bad jump, such as the skinny of brushes.
I've followed some of your progress, but don't know the whole story so sorry if I'm barking up completley the wrong tree
I agree with what vikkiandmonica said in that it all looks good with a lot of potential but it's lost it's flow and it can all be a bit awkward.
Do you only ever cross country school as a group with a trainer around? Is it (as typical group xc lessons are) a case of being set an obstacle, watch each partnership do it a couple of times, complete it yourself, come back and stand?
Friend was doing this with her horse and he was really struggling, especially with skinnys and ditches because he was lacking confidence. However, the moment the skinnys and ditches were incorporated into a course he was in a good rhythm, both horse and rider were in a course mindset. They weren't focused on the individual jump, but the idea of navigating a whole field of obstacles, planning turns etc. The ditches and skinnys then weren't a problem for either of them as both were going forward in a natural stride.
You may well already take him round courses and link lots of fences, I just know my friend and her horse looked a lot like you do in the video, because they couldn't cope with the disjointed lessons.
They did a lot of pairs schooling. So went out with an experienced horse and rider and just kept in a flow linking jumps (round courses they both knew so they were prepared for what was coming). The "problem" horse was getting a lead from the experienced horse, so more confident, and both were forward and in a rhythm. They would jump at least 10 jumps in a constant, forward xc rhythm as they would if they were competing, before approaching a ditch or a skinny. After the ditch or the skinny they'd continue to another fence. So the horse never had a chance to back off because they're going forward to the next fence, not to the ditch. Any runs outs just meant they'd go back a fence or two and then experienced horse would jump and then "problem" horse. So that the "problem" horse never had a chance to stop or lose the rhythm.
Just a suggestion if it's something you haven't already tried. There is a lot of potential and a lot to like in the video, so here's hoping it is something you get sorted
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