Sitting trot - how easy was it for you?

Ditto dylan66. Sitting to the trot has nothing to do with relaxing your back as such. Every person have certain amount of pelvic flexibility and that is why some prefer big moving horses and find them easy and some are happier on smoother moving horses.

Try to watch your horse's back first when you are lunging him/her. Look what happens to the muscles on each side of the spine. You will notice that they go up and down as one then the other hind leg travels forward and back.
Once you really 'see' this in your head, pop on your horse bareback. Sit up, don't slouch and feel what is happening underneath you. Feel your seat bones moving (try on the horse that you find the easiest).

Once you know what is going on within your body try to influence it. Sitting to the trot equals controlling the swing in your pelvis. Your pelvis is a big, fused bone. If one side goes down the other goes up. On a smooth horse this happens somewhat automatically as there is not much swing needed. On a horse that bounces more you need not only allow for this swing but also actively help it.
You do this by using your abdominal muscles on left and right side of your waist (as they attach to your left and right hip bone and can lift it - try while sitting on a chair).

Once you are on a big moving horse you need to pull your, let's say, right seat bone up while the muscle on the right side of the horse's spine goes up. In the same time stretch your left leg down to help the already happening lowering of the left seat bone. In this way you are facilitating the movement instead of hindering it.
It's a long process and some people never learn to sit to big movers. I am personally much happier on a horse with a medium sort of bounce. Too smooth a horse is quite difficult to improve as you need a very good feeling of when which leg is doing what. Big boys are for long legged, lucky people
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Lots of lunge lessons and good trainer, perseverance and willingness to learn what is happening with your body and you will get there!

(sorry for the lecture
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Lusolover, surely thats not a luso that has such an "uppy" trot? I thought lusos were usually the easier horse to sit to...
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Obvious things I know, but these are things I have taken on and adapted to:

Try to pre-empt the horse's "up" phase by lifting your bottom by using your abdomen in advance of the upward "thrust"

So, with each bounce, you start to go up to receive his back up into you (does that make sense) I bet you're already doing that.

Rythm is key, any changes in my horse's rhythm and I get the sitting all wrong and harsh. Then her back tenses and she goes all stiff. Whilst we're swinging along in a rhythm I can pre-empt every "up" with my body weight.

Imagine that you are lifting up the whole of your bottom, hips, legs and the whole horse with each "up" Of course the down is not the problem after that, because your bottom and his back are still touching by then!
 
I had a simulator lesson to learn how to do sitting trot without the need for woring about the horse (even managed it in medium) As another angle to try?
 
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Try to watch your horse's back first when you are lunging him/her. Look what happens to the muscles on each side of the spine. You will notice that they go up and down as one then the other hind leg travels forward and back.
Once you really 'see' this in your head, pop on your horse bareback. Sit up, don't slouch and feel what is happening underneath you. Feel your seat bones moving (try on the horse that you find the easiest).


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Sorry this made me giggle - as Odie when normally lunged goes absolutely nanas and leaps around like something out of the spanish riding school!!! So watching the muscles on his back isn't an option as I'm more worried about where I will get pulled to or through!

However you are more than welcome to come and sit on him bareback! I'm just trying to figure out how I would get onto all 17.2 of him without having a stirrup to put my foot into!

And as for sitting bareback on the one that I can sit too, I saw what he did to my son when he tried riding him bareback!!! Shall we just say he doesn't do bareback riding!!!

Abdominal muscles? What are those? I lost those years ago through having two kids!

Jo C, Freestyler and Finni - I wanna join in the space hopper race, sounds much easier than trying to sit to Odie's trot!
 
Riding the bounciest horse in the yard with no stirrups for weeks on end - that's how I learnt. Plus lunge lessons helped as you can really concentrate on the movement etc
 
The best method I've found is the arm out excercise.
In trot take the reins in one hand and stretch your other arm out horizontally at shoulder level.
This lengthens your diaphram and relaxes your middle, and the effort of keeping the arm straight makes you relax enough and go floppy in the middle to be able to sit with the horse.
To demonstrate what you should be doing, try off the horse (obviously!) putting one hand over the other both facing down. Keep the underneath one moving up and down and first try keeping the top one stiff. It bounces like hell. Then repeat allowing the top one to go floppy, and you realise that is all you need to do, sit taller and allow the middle part of you to be flexible.
I admit we started every lesson as a student for months minus stirrups for a good twenty minutes, and eventually I learned to sit to virtually anything, the worst thing you can do is actually try too hard. daft I know but that's the truth!
 
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