SaddlePsych'D
Well-Known Member
I'm imagining we're all a bit busy! Also weather here is very windy and I think more forecast tomorrow. I'll be found on the sofa catching up on London International.
Lesson for me yesterday, on a horse I have only been hacking on before. He took some getting used to as much smaller than the big ID I usually ride for lessons, and a bit of a character in the way perhaps only native cobs can be.
To begin with instead of trot I got a wiggly worm! My leg on the arena fence or an inside shoulder saying 'byyee!' in a way that past me would have got scared he was going to bog off with me or decided I could not ride that horse. Actually current me though that too but kept riding!
Clearly I am more robust than at the beginning of the year because I could laugh at myself, particularly at saying 'get on with it, get on with it' repeatedly out loud to make myself keep trotting
It was such a good lesson in how to keep straightness and manage wiggly worm shoulders. By the end we had achieved trot on both reins, on the track, and had a fabulous forward and connected walk at the end.
Lesson for me yesterday, on a horse I have only been hacking on before. He took some getting used to as much smaller than the big ID I usually ride for lessons, and a bit of a character in the way perhaps only native cobs can be.
To begin with instead of trot I got a wiggly worm! My leg on the arena fence or an inside shoulder saying 'byyee!' in a way that past me would have got scared he was going to bog off with me or decided I could not ride that horse. Actually current me though that too but kept riding!
Clearly I am more robust than at the beginning of the year because I could laugh at myself, particularly at saying 'get on with it, get on with it' repeatedly out loud to make myself keep trotting
It was such a good lesson in how to keep straightness and manage wiggly worm shoulders. By the end we had achieved trot on both reins, on the track, and had a fabulous forward and connected walk at the end.