Ruth Edge lesson - Report

Joss

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As Promised:-
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Last night, at a time of the evening when I should have been lighting the fire & cooking the tea I toddled off to my first ever lesson with Ruth Edge. It had been organised by a friend who knows Ruth well & was being held at our local indoor school (about 1 1/2 hours drive away!!
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It was just dressage as Ruth is currently recovering from having an operation on her knee so she wasnt wanting to lug jumps about.

I had decided to take my younger horse, Echo (at PN level or should I call that BE 100) as Bruno (my advanced boy) has had a week off with a swollen leg.

Ruth was lovely & very friendly & asked me to give her a quick resume of myself & my horse whilst I started to warm up. I then worked in walk, trot & canter whilst she watched. Echo was in good form & was going fairly nicely from the outset & I tried to encourage him to work a little deeper than he naturally prefers.

We then set to work & Ruth made me get him a little lower & rounder in his head carriage & we did a lot of trot,walk, trot transistions with the emphasis on taking the contact & keeping the engagement through the transistion. This worked well & we spiralled into 10m circles & then leg yeilded out to a bigger circle & made sure we could do it going large around the school.

Then into canter. Echo is fairly forward in his canter & I had asked for help with keeping him settled in the more advanced Novice tests which have more canterwork. Ruth took me fairly literally here & OMG did we canter & canter & canter pretty much solidly for about 20-25 mins
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We managed to gain a very brief rest as the lights in the indoor school as on a £1 meter & they very suddenly went off & left us cantering in the absolute pitch black, made me jump much more than Echo. Had to have a quick whip round for more money!

Again the ideas were the same, a deep outline (much deeper than you would ride a test with but this was a SCHOOLING excercise) & lots of give & retake the reins so there was no way I could be pulling at him or 'holding' him together. He had to be in self balance & learn to 'wait' for me. We had to shorten/collect as much as possible on a 10m circle & then keep in collection going large. She also reminded me to keep my hands in front of me as they tend to slip floorwards.

By the end of our 45 min session I could hardly see Ruth through the cloud of steam that surrounded me. Echo settled into his canter work better than he ever has before. Ruth didnt drastically change the things I had been working on previously but she got me to take it a stage further & stick with it. I am obviously far, far too soft (lazy) & need to work a lively, sharp horse like him in a much more determined fashion to make him accept the leg much more as it is easy to just sit there & be taken along by a forward going horse but this is just not possible at the higher levels so needs to be worked on now. Ruth expressed a bit of surprise at how forward (& a bit sharp) Echo is, not very typical of a Warmblood. She agreed with me that he thinks he is a TB!

Sorry no pics as no camera! A big smile for Ruth although sadly such lessons will not be a regualar occurance as fairly £££.

Sorry for such long ramblings but YOU lot did request a report & there is only so much excitement to be had in a flatwork lesson
 
I really enjoyed reading that, thank u for posting. V interesting about taking things further...being satisfied with less than we should. My old teacher used to say 'keep on taking the tablets!', used to drive me nuts!! Its only now that the pennys dropping...
 
Lovely report and interesting to hear her tactics with him. Why is it we all work so much harder/more focussed in a lesson?
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It's not laziness I don't think, but more a case of having the courage of our convictions to stick at something - when I'm working on my own I think I back off thinking I might be on the wrong track... Well done, anyway, I'm very jealous!
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What a fantastic lesson! Very interesting as well, i think we all can be a bit soft especially when on a very forward going horse. One of my problems is getting my horse to accept the leg (ex Racer) & my instructor keeps on drumming it into me that as a result i almost have to use them more.
Well done you & Echo.
 
Great report. Sounds like she worked you very hard but at least it paid off. I am really hoping to get some lessons form her this winter as she is the closet eventer to me(1 hour in wagon) and she is a really nice person too!
 
I do enjoy reading about other trainers. It sounds like you had a great time, i did have to LOL when the lights went off, this has happend to me at a yard I use to rent their indoor school throughout the winter. Did it take long for the lights to come back on? sometimes it takes 10 (pain in the arse).

Ask for money for xmas
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then you can have more training with her
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Wow, well done. Must be great rubbing shoulders with the stars. I think I would be a bit starstruck!

I think re the 'asking for a lot more' thing that's the one thing I always come away from flat lessons with. We're a soft bunch aren't we! I go home and work the horse really hard, as per the lesson, for a day or two then it all slips off a bit at a time until 10 days later or so I'm back to being sloppy and need to go for another @rse-kicking session.

Hope yours stays with you longer (though I suspect you are more disciplined than me!) as I bet she is pretty expensive.
 
That sounds great, lots to take away with you and work on. I bet you were knackered by the time you got home!

It sounds like Ruth's methods are simple and effective, and you just have to slog away at them until it all comes together. Even if you manage to remember a few salient points you should be halfway to recreating the same at home hopefully. I wish I could find a dressage trainer like that.
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I wish I could find a dressage trainer like that.
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Snigger, I can come and teach you, my methods are simple and effective... I shall bring a bottle
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Sounds excellent. It is always amazing how much harder you have to work to get the results wanted, but then suddenly everything becomes easier!!
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Definite moral of it paying off if you work hard enough....
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Does it involve shouting/bullying? If so I will need rose and Jaffa cakes to get me through it.
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Nah, just involves me sitting there with a drink and the lesson getting easier and easier
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Great report, she sounds fab. I know what you mean, I am always focused in a lesson, it def helps when my instructor can see he is being a pain and tell me I am right, sometimes when you are on your own you dont have the courage of your convictions!?
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I really rate Ruth as a rider and its good to hear that she is just as good as a trainer! She's trained with Judy Harvey for years and has proved herself as a very talented dressage rider in both disciplines. What she had you do sounds spot on.
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So Jossy, when you are next down to see your mum does that mean you can come and give me a lesson on the flying Grey and pass on the new found knowledge???????? lol

Well done, sounds fab x
 
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I also think Ruth is very underestimated!


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Do you think so? I thought it was widely accepted that she is up there with Bettina Hoy and Pippa Funnell as one of eventing's dressage divas. I saw her at Blenheim and even in the mud she managed to ride every movement and every transition without wasting an inch of the arena or throwing away a single mark.
 
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