sh90
Well-Known Member
Thinking in the near future its time to start introducing the above. How would you personally go about teaching it to your pony?
Jiffy said something useful about walk to canter transitions in Dumbo's post on here - I'll probably get it wrong even though I've only just read it (lots on my mind at the moment!) so hopefully she'll be here to correct me if necessary, but essentially you should use walk to canter transitions as a way of setting yourself up to canter so that you give the correct aids that the horse will respond to. When preparing for the canter transition count down from three, then give the aid on one whilst breathing out. In this way you will be preparing yourself without over thinking it, and hopefully your horse won't anticipate too much and will go off your aid.
Some horses will get tense/overexcited when doing this so lots of praise and a scratch on the withers when they strike off, then bring them down to a nice steady trot. I'm not sure whether teaching walk to canter transitions should necessarily go with teaching direct canter to walk transitions too - maybe someone could answer this question?
Jiffy said something useful about walk to canter transitions in Dumbo's post on here - I'll probably get it wrong even though I've only just read it (lots on my mind at the moment!) so hopefully she'll be here to correct me if necessary, but essentially you should use walk to canter transitions as a way of setting yourself up to canter so that you give the correct aids that the horse will respond to. When preparing for the canter transition count down from three, then give the aid on one whilst breathing out. In this way you will be preparing yourself without over thinking it, and hopefully your horse won't anticipate too much and will go off your aid.