chaps89
Well-Known Member
I have always ridden green/naughty ponies. Recently I've acquired the ride on an advanced dressage schoolmaster. Quite the shock to the system! What I'm learning is to be very conscious of what I'm doing and what I'm asking- for example the first time I attempted canter leg yield I got flying changes. Not the horses fault, I had put my outside leg back/on and inadvertently asked for it. Out hacking on wednesday we found the 'canter spot' and it took all my concentration just to 'sit' and stay still.
So I can very easily see how you could lose your confidence making this sort of transition/have mishaps along the way.
I am going through the process with back up from the owner and a large amount of regular lessons with a trainer who knows me and the horse well and this is key. Also because it gives me the chance to compete at a higher level than I'd dreamed would be possible but more importantly for me, improve my riding and give me a new challenge so it feels worth going through the inevitable ups and downs.
It's worth looking at your ambitions- just because your mare can jump 3ft+ comfortably doesn't mean she needs to, if you are happy dressaging/hacking and she's otherwise nice to have around then putting jumping ambitions to one side may be an option. The alternative is getting serious with your training to learn how to adapt your riding to her or accepting that maybe you and your mare are on different wavelengths and better suited to different horses/riders. There isn't a wrong or right answer to this but at the end of the day it's an expensive hobby that's supposed to be fun, if you're not enjoying it/doing what you want is it worth it?
Also, have you had chance to analyse your falls with your trainer- by establishing what caused the fall you could look at where to focus your training on and how to handle the situation next time round maybe?
So I can very easily see how you could lose your confidence making this sort of transition/have mishaps along the way.
I am going through the process with back up from the owner and a large amount of regular lessons with a trainer who knows me and the horse well and this is key. Also because it gives me the chance to compete at a higher level than I'd dreamed would be possible but more importantly for me, improve my riding and give me a new challenge so it feels worth going through the inevitable ups and downs.
It's worth looking at your ambitions- just because your mare can jump 3ft+ comfortably doesn't mean she needs to, if you are happy dressaging/hacking and she's otherwise nice to have around then putting jumping ambitions to one side may be an option. The alternative is getting serious with your training to learn how to adapt your riding to her or accepting that maybe you and your mare are on different wavelengths and better suited to different horses/riders. There isn't a wrong or right answer to this but at the end of the day it's an expensive hobby that's supposed to be fun, if you're not enjoying it/doing what you want is it worth it?
Also, have you had chance to analyse your falls with your trainer- by establishing what caused the fall you could look at where to focus your training on and how to handle the situation next time round maybe?