lukeylou
Well-Known Member
starting to longrein my boy tomorrow, any advice at all would be useful!
also, can you longrein in a pessoa?
also, can you longrein in a pessoa?
Greater tensions were required to elicit the responses during long-reining than when riding
although there was no relationship between these tensions. Thus, the rein tensions required for
long-reining were not a predictor of the rein tensions required when riding the same standard
course. The difference in the maximum tension recorded was 7 N. Given that the difference in the
weight of the reins between riding and long-reining was only 1.5 N, the increased tension
required for long-reining must reflect other influences. These could include the length of the reins
used in long-reining that may affect the maintenance of the lightest of contact (McLean, 2003)
because the greater distance between horse and handler reduces sensitivity to the horses mouth
(Wynmalen, 1985). These results show that long-reining should be conducted with caution and it
is not a practice that should regularly be applied to young horses in their foundation training,
especially if the ultimate aim is for them to respond to the lightest stimuli. If the chief benefits of
long-reining are to linked to safety, perhaps increased attention to habituating horses to girths,
saddles and the weight of riders, or even an alternative method of teaching rein signals, would
have the same outcome.
As Cook (2003) described, driving a horse in long-reins implies dependence on the reins as the
main form of communication due to the lack of other modes of stimulus application, such as seat
and legs. As expected, greater tensions were required to achieve the halt response during longreining
than riding. This highlights the importance of the use of other stimuli, such as weight and
legs through classical conditioning, that reduce the need for tension in the reins to achieve a halt.
Having said that, the tensions applied for the halt response were much greater than those required
for any other response. This shows that riders and trainers need to be careful with the amount of
rein tension used when halting and furthermore, that a greater understanding of the process of
classical conditioning is necessary so that the reliance on rein tension can be decreased as swiftly
and elegantly as possible. It was not surprising that the more steps were taken by the horse to
perform the halt, the greater the rein tension required to achieve the halt response, since latency to
complete the response is a measure of the horses responsiveness to the halt stimulus (McGreevy,
2004). Generally, horses that have habituated to rein tension will be more inclined to lean on thebit pressure rather than actually slow the legs, as the correct meaning of the rein stimulus has been
blurred (McLean, 2003).