doriangrey
Well-Known Member
http://www.horseandhound.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=607365
thought provoking.
thought provoking.
Good heavens! WHO is teaching people these things? NEITHER of you are persuing a path that will result in a horse going happily on the bit and with his body in the correct posture.
If it was up to me all riders would learn first on a lunge with a neckstrap and until they got their balance and feel for what was going on underneath them they wouldnt get near a set of reins, just my opinion
Those who say that their horse goes on the bit without any contact/washing line reins surely your horse isn't 'on the bit' (god i hate that phrase!). You need a contact to have your horse connected and your hands need to be still otherwise the mouth can't be either. I hate all that wiggling fidgeting stuff some instructors seem to teach, the horse can never take a contact if their isn't a consistent one there!
The one thing this thread is doing for me is making me ask, again, who on earth is teaching this way? And where did they (the instructors) learn this stuff? It's HORRIFYING!
Sooo many riders dont understand just how much forwardness, balance and core strength is needed by a horse in order for it to work correctly through its back. I somewhat despise the know it alls who saw away at the horse or ponies mouth, those that put gags and all sorts in when they are not required, but its the fashion! (ill come on to that in a min!)
I have always started my younsters by allowing them to seek and find thier own balance in walk on ever increesingly small circles, but maintaining their balance throughout, which then by default brings in to play the natural bend required in order to balance. They will do this exercise for a min of 2 weeks in the school every other day before I ever entertain trot... and we are still a long way from obtaining that lovely soft round contact.... I start here... and add to the training in baby steps as I go, until I end up with a soft round horse who enjoys working correctly carrying themselves balanced and forward, who isnt strong in the hand, and who isnt behind the leg.
Gong back to my earlier statement.... I have also got soooo fed up in the past with a know it all teenager who dropped her hands, sawing away at the horses mouth with a dutch gag in... why because she thought thats what the showjumpers do to "get them on the bit"!No matter what I said she wouldn't stop, So I got out my Abbot Davies Balancing Rein, and put that on the horse, told her to carry her hands, and get her leg close and firm... it didnt take long before she felt her horse carry its self, the horse was far happier, and she STOPPED abusing the poor animals mouth etc
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Only problem is I have come across another of these hard handed teenage wanabe showjumpers in the past few days, and my Abbot Davies is brokenand I cant get another
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Blimey.
Horses put up with such a lot.
If I rode with a strong contact I wouldn't get anywhere as strong contact + leg = rearing as far as my mare is concerned. I have to ride her with 'baby birds' IE hold the reins as if they are baby birds not reins. Squeeze too tightly and the birds get squished, hold too lightly and the birds fly away.
I've been told this one too
I see quite a few people getting their horses into an "outline" using the method described by the OPSo many people just aren't bothering with decent lessons these days I think
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I like yelling "the hand should never be retroactive" while schooling / watching people school (on youtube - the advantage of my field is that I never have to watch anyone sock their horse in the gob in the name of schooling in person!). It's a turn of phrase I nicked from Charles de Kunffy who said it repeatedly at a TTT clinic I happened to watch. It's remarkably pleasing to say outloud... Try it
I think it's a nice description too - it can be supportive, there is definitely contact, but it's not backwards, pully or fiddly.
That said, I also say it during fast work while mocking my inability to stop via the (non-existent) authority of my seat![]()
I just tie their mouths to their necks with baling twine for a week at a time. Never had a problem..
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That's just cruel.
What you should be doing is barricading them into the corner of the stable with an old door. If they can't move, you won't need baler twine.![]()
Get your horse trotting on a circle, use an open rein with the inside hand (move it sideways towards the middle of the circle by a few inches) and then use your inside leg behind the girth. Use the outside rein if necessary to prevent going faster, and the outside leg to prevent the horses hindquarters swinging out.
What you are trying to achieve is for the horse to cross it's inside hind leg in front of the other a little, as it reaches under with it's hind leg it will build up muscles in its back so becoming better able to carry out the exercise. You will know when you are doing it correctly because the horses head will drop down where you want it to be.![]()