sparry
Well-Known Member
Has anyone got any tips for teaching a horse medium trot?
One instructor I have had swears by having a lead horse in front (be in in a school or on hack) in a working canter and asking your horse to keep up, but in trot so the only option he has is to lengthen the stride.
I have never heard of that one. Would that theory not just make the horse strong in the hand and plough onto the forehand ?
The stride is opened from behind, with the hind leg generating the energy, the hand containing and allowing it and enabling the wither to rise and lighten the forehand and that in turn allows the forelimb to lengthen.
One instructor I have had swears by having a lead horse in front (be in in a school or on hack) in a working canter and asking your horse to keep up, but in trot so the only option he has is to lengthen the stride.
I have never heard of that one. Would that theory not just make the horse strong in the hand and plough onto the forehand ?
The stride is opened from behind, with the hind leg generating the energy, the hand containing and allowing it and enabling the wither to rise and lighten the forehand and that in turn allows the forelimb to lengthen.
I was sceptical, but it came from a well known trainer, and the theory is that you do it to get the horse 'animated' and thinking power, then you can work on it without the lead and refine it. I doubt it would work for all horses and the one I had to do it with, and a lady at our yard who was taught this way had big 'lazy in mind' horses.
I know the old mare we had would just tank if I tried the above - couple of halt to canter transitions was enough to get the right outcome![]()
I've always been taught to use a small trot circle to collect up then push for a few strides out of it, to start with as soon as you get the transition to the bigger stride go back to normal trot and praise, moving onto asking for it, half halting, asking for it again, few strides on half halting, until the horse gets the idea and builds the strength and balance to maintain the bigger trot for a longer period. I admit the canter methods wouldn't work for me as I tend to start working on medium trot ASAP as it's in every driving dressage test there is and my canter down transitions are poor and push most things onto their forehandsI'm not sure even now with Pip who has a very established medium I could get it straight out of a canter without him losing balance a few strides after
With C I start with working on it on a 20m circle, along with asking for bits of collection keeping changing within the pace as I really struggle to hold him together but once we're really listening to each other we can do it on straights
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