ester
Not slacking multitasking
I'm pleased that these sort of things do have some marketing these days though as there are plenty of us who didn't have access to that much 'good' information otherwise.
Having “felt†that moment in trot when horse is nose low yet back comes under/lifts, rhythm stays same yet light steady contact and in moment of absolute balance is magic, you suddenly get what you are working for. It just feels awesome!
I call that 'trampoline trot' . Brilliant feeling, isn't it?
I'm pleased that these sort of things do have some marketing these days though as there are plenty of us who didn't have access to that much 'good' information otherwise.
This. Very few people have access to those with the sort of knowledge we are talking about. ST and the Mendez DVDs are brilliant, both rooted in the classical masters' work, unlike so much modern dressage, yet add to it just a smidge of modern biomech knowledge and lots (in the case of ST) of human psychology and learning theory. It's easy to diss these things as unnecessary systems, but I see the difference in the horses, and if we educate a few more people then all to the good.
I do absolutely agree with you, but why don't the instructors teach this at the very beginning? And if they don't know, why not? It would appear that the so-called "professional" qualifications available are in fact very far from that...
I don't think it's realistic to expect the majority of trainers to have this level of knowledge.
I don't think it's realistic to expect the majority of trainers to have this level of knowledge.
I think actually a lot of people are getting lessons in week in week out without giving themselves time between lessons to do their homework and are focused more on getting something out of a lesson that day rather than realising it's a work in progress.
I see older friends with stiff, crock horses, with poor saddles, physical issues themselves, and confidence issues, and a desire to get horse’s head down and in, and I really don’t envy the job some of the local instructors and bodyworkers have. Everyone has good intentions.
That's very kind of youyou've actually just reminded me - the book I bought came with a DVD and I still haven't watched it! Once I've watched it, I'll do you a swap if you like? There are a couple of exercises I haven't done yet because I haven't quite understood them from the photos - I need to see them in action, I think.
Please to hear your horse is showing signs of improvement - it's probably going to be a long, slow and (let's face it) a bit of a boring process, but it'll all be worth it in the end!
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Yes that would be great! And yes, think is a long hard slog, especially rehabbing in this weather. But hoping pays off, and I think rehabbing does force us to learn new skills, understanding and tools which hopefully help prevent future injuries.