Yogi Breisner Lecture - a chilly report.....

meardsall_millie

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Well, Horsemad12 and I went along to Vale View EC last night and braved the cold for a couple of hours to listen to a Yogi Breisner lecture
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Firstly, I have to say that he is a completely riveting speaker. Completely inspirational - the kind of person you could sit and listen to for hours. He thinks about many things from a completely different angle and his attention to detail is second to none. It's no wonder the British Eventing Team is in such good shape
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So, in true HHO fashion, we've compiled a list of the key points to share with you all. I'm sure there's much we've missed, and for that we are sorry, but it was too flipping cold to take notes, so these are from memory!
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· Pressure is what you put on yourself or allow others to put on you. Analyse how you react (be honest with yourself) and learn/develop your own coping mechanisms

· Plan – set short, medium and long term goals, relevant to each horse, which are realistic and achievable – no dreaming here

· Prepare well to be able to perform well – mental and physical

· Keep depositing into the Confidence Bank – you need lots of good experiences, once / if you start to go into the red, it can go down and will do so rapidly, take it back to basics and build it up again – can be done!

· Rider fitness – good basic level but also fit for purpose

· Rider position is crucial

· Mental fitness – recognise what you need to succeed (including support from your ‘team’ and getting rid of negative vibes) – but this is individual some people thrive on being negative, some like to talk, others quiet, some to go first, others last

· Try to prepare for every eventuality so you then have the capacity left to think on your feet and deal with the unexpected

· Horse fitness – introduce short sprints into fast work to cope with modern XC courses, don’t stick to one pace canters, etc

· Develop skills through good basic training using one method in the first instance then once established move into specific training, using different trainers/methods if necessary

· Have a mentor and a trainer (don’t need to be the same person)

· Practice makes permanent – stupidity is doing what you’ve always done and expecting different results. If it’s not working change it.

· Top eventers can be made out of average horses (unlike dressage and SJ where exceptional horses are needed) – it’s all about consistent, effective training methods

· When training the horse – repetition of correctness not repetition until you get it correct – don’t stop when you do get it correct as a reward (except with youngsters) practice the correct way otherwise you have practiced 5 wrong ways and 1 correct with the same emphasis.

· Practice dressage tests – inc the full test, if the horse anticipates they are not correctly on the aids. Also ride sections of the test. This has really helped the British Team improve marks.

· Training the horse stages –

o FUNdamental – young horse, learn to go forward and have fun, hacking, hunting, etc
o train to train – the horse needs to learn how to settle into consistent training sessions
o train to compete – more specific work for the intended role
o train to win – the finishing touches
o compete to win – lots of red rosettes!

· After a competition, analyse what worked well and why and take this forward to the next one. Don’t dwell on what didn’t go well (identify it, deal with it and move on) – BUT FOCUS ON THE POSITIVES

There were also a few witty anecdotes about team members at various championships - but he wouldn't name names!!

Hope this has been helpful.......
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[ QUOTE ]


· Practice dressage tests – inc the full test, if the horse anticipates they are not correctly on the aids. Also ride sections of the test. This has really helped the British Team improve marks.



[/ QUOTE ]

Soooo true, this one really annoys me when people say their horse pre-empts the movement the test, what a load of rubbish!!

Thats for posting this
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Fantastic, sounds really really educational! Gutted I missed it now
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Was going to PM you yesterday but didnt get chance
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SHould have armed you with a vid camera
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REALLY interesting thanks M_M. Loads of good stuff in there. I went to a winter lecture at VV a couple years ago and literally thought I was going to die of cold so you have my sympathy on that front
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Thanks for the report. Do you know if he is doing any more in other parts of the country. I have not seen them advertised anywhere.
 
H_J I was there with M_M last night and giggled at the "learning the tests" bits. Unfortunately I have a horse that is not on the aids as she learns the test (Usually transitions) far quicker than I do - trust me she does and it is really infruitating, esp in the last test when she got it right and I got it wrong!

My excuse of "clever pony" has now gone for ever and bad rider / poorly schooled horse has taken its place!!!!!

Message to self - plan and prepare!
 
Very impressed with your report - and no notes! I was there too but wouldn't have been able to compile such a comprehensive of what went on...

Really enjoyed it, I can see why the Brits do so well with him as Chef..
 
Thanks for that m_m, I am pleasantly surprised you managed to remember that much of it, good effort.
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I particularly like the Confidence Bank: I'd heard it called "going to the well" and that you shouldn't dip into the well too often - it's the only thing that OH remembers and will quote back at me after a tricky day's hunting.
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Glad you all enjoyed the report - which was definitely a joint effort between me and Horsemad12, there's no way I would have remembered all that myself!
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KatB - not sure that the video would have been watchable, it would be rather wobbly from all the shivering
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isz - we'd anticipated it being a bit chilly and had gone for layers (interesting when you needed the loo
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) and the 'blanket wrapped round legs like little old ladies' approach!

Vrin - did we miss anything out? He went through so much stuff it's hard to recall it all. Where were you sitting?

Baydale - have to admit I did think of you when he started talking about the bank, it's just your sort of analogy!
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