ycbm
Overwhelmed
Is a cob harder to train for dressage than a warmblood? And how does different breeding compare?
Just musing about how difficult various horses I've had have been to train for flat work/dressage. I'm currently training a short and thick necked, thick through the gullet Clydex up to medium standard and he's possibly the most difficult horse I've ever trained at this level.
He isn't naturally built to do dressage, and he's a master at shifting my weight where he wants it (forwards and to the left) and using the strength in his neck to run straight out through the bit.
The easiest, until kissing spines got too much for him, was a purpose bred Hanoverian warmblood.
Comparing the two it was so easy to train the warmblood. He was preprogrammed with the aids for lengthening, shortening, impulsion and cadence. Another warmblood I had was temperamentally very difficult (KWPN) but again physically extremely talented with natural cadence and elevation.
What are your experiences? Do people who can get a tune out of horses not designed for dressage have a harder time of it, or just a different time of it? Are they more skillful, or differently skilled?
Just musing about how difficult various horses I've had have been to train for flat work/dressage. I'm currently training a short and thick necked, thick through the gullet Clydex up to medium standard and he's possibly the most difficult horse I've ever trained at this level.
He isn't naturally built to do dressage, and he's a master at shifting my weight where he wants it (forwards and to the left) and using the strength in his neck to run straight out through the bit.
The easiest, until kissing spines got too much for him, was a purpose bred Hanoverian warmblood.
Comparing the two it was so easy to train the warmblood. He was preprogrammed with the aids for lengthening, shortening, impulsion and cadence. Another warmblood I had was temperamentally very difficult (KWPN) but again physically extremely talented with natural cadence and elevation.
What are your experiences? Do people who can get a tune out of horses not designed for dressage have a harder time of it, or just a different time of it? Are they more skillful, or differently skilled?