Gingernags
Well-Known Member
Dressage test at the weekend threw up a problem that was evident over the summer but that I have let go really as it wasn't affecting me that much. It has become apparent though that if I do want to improve our dressage, I need to think about it and how to fix it...
With the ginger one, if you want an outline all you ever had to do was keep your hands still and light and raised and she would just drop onto your hands. She was fine with the two people who competed her at the time and I just had to work a bit harder if I was schooling as it didn't really come naturally to me - I mainly hack and on a longer contact than normal.
With the last girl that we let compete her, before the big bust up, it became apparent that she taught Asti one of her bad habits. It was picked up by the friend who comes and plays with Asti now and again and is our showing ally and always helps warm her up (and the rider) and the riders other horse.
The rider - we'll call her R for simplicity - has a habit of not sawing as such but certainly giving and taking with alternate hands causing the horses nose to swing and in the orange ones case, her to fight the contact. I thought it was just Asti being awkward but with hindsight there were an awful lot more tantrums thrown in the ring than with anyone else.
As a result, its much harder to get Asti to work in a nice soft outline without more resistance than before which as I'm almost entirely self taught and we don't have the facilities in the winter for schooling other than what I can manage out hacking, is making it harder for me.
The comments in the dressage yesterday, though on the whole good, were that she needs to be rounder, at one point was above the bit slightly, another she was "coming against the riders hands" and on the whole though she is obedient and has good regular paces, needs to be rounder.
She is ridden in a loose ring french link snaffle and is far worse in jointed or straight bar bits.
I have to say she has stopped leaning as much which was part of the problem with R and that at one point she was, we thought, bridle lame through R's handiwork - and the same is true of her own horse and my showing friend saw that (rode him before he exhibited this and then has seen the change and ridden since and felt it) and agrees something has changed.
So what can I do to start to undo this problem? I find it difficult sometimes to keep my hands still and have to really concentrate, as you can feel this pull from side to side.
She has never been a horse that has needed too much asking for an outline, a really quiet squeeze of the reins and a bit of leg more than any "niggling" at her which was another thing R used to do.
Ideas? Anything we can try out hacking?
With the ginger one, if you want an outline all you ever had to do was keep your hands still and light and raised and she would just drop onto your hands. She was fine with the two people who competed her at the time and I just had to work a bit harder if I was schooling as it didn't really come naturally to me - I mainly hack and on a longer contact than normal.
With the last girl that we let compete her, before the big bust up, it became apparent that she taught Asti one of her bad habits. It was picked up by the friend who comes and plays with Asti now and again and is our showing ally and always helps warm her up (and the rider) and the riders other horse.
The rider - we'll call her R for simplicity - has a habit of not sawing as such but certainly giving and taking with alternate hands causing the horses nose to swing and in the orange ones case, her to fight the contact. I thought it was just Asti being awkward but with hindsight there were an awful lot more tantrums thrown in the ring than with anyone else.
As a result, its much harder to get Asti to work in a nice soft outline without more resistance than before which as I'm almost entirely self taught and we don't have the facilities in the winter for schooling other than what I can manage out hacking, is making it harder for me.
The comments in the dressage yesterday, though on the whole good, were that she needs to be rounder, at one point was above the bit slightly, another she was "coming against the riders hands" and on the whole though she is obedient and has good regular paces, needs to be rounder.
She is ridden in a loose ring french link snaffle and is far worse in jointed or straight bar bits.
I have to say she has stopped leaning as much which was part of the problem with R and that at one point she was, we thought, bridle lame through R's handiwork - and the same is true of her own horse and my showing friend saw that (rode him before he exhibited this and then has seen the change and ridden since and felt it) and agrees something has changed.
So what can I do to start to undo this problem? I find it difficult sometimes to keep my hands still and have to really concentrate, as you can feel this pull from side to side.
She has never been a horse that has needed too much asking for an outline, a really quiet squeeze of the reins and a bit of leg more than any "niggling" at her which was another thing R used to do.
Ideas? Anything we can try out hacking?