madhector
Well-Known Member
My 4yr old is exceptionally bold, and when she arrived went as fast as possible in her approach to fences. After actually teaching her to canter (rather than run disunited round the school till she fell over) we started to address the jumping.
So far we have had 2 different methods suggested, and both have very different effects on her canter.
First was to insist that she waits and goes at a collected canter (which she is now perfectly capable of doing) This resulted in her going very 'up' in the canter and almost bouncing on her back legs into the fence, even with the slightest hold/or even just using my seat to slow her. She then clears the fence beautifully. It just feels slightly like jumping a JA jumping pony
Second was to leave her completely alone and let her pick the pace, eventually aiming to just slop along to the fence, pop it and amble off afterwards. To start with she just rushed and had them down, but soon got the idea and started to slow herself, but never to the extent that I would say was right, but she was relaxed and didnt bounce and cleared the fence as before.
I think because she naturally has the most uphill canter, unless she is working in an outline, when you take a slight hold she comes right up in front and bounces.
So having played around with both methods, wondered what people on here thought? She jumped 3 rounds the other weekend, the first 2 using the second approach, but the 3rd ended up using the first as the fences were not big enough at this point to demand her respect and she was going too quick.
Thanks
So far we have had 2 different methods suggested, and both have very different effects on her canter.
First was to insist that she waits and goes at a collected canter (which she is now perfectly capable of doing) This resulted in her going very 'up' in the canter and almost bouncing on her back legs into the fence, even with the slightest hold/or even just using my seat to slow her. She then clears the fence beautifully. It just feels slightly like jumping a JA jumping pony
Second was to leave her completely alone and let her pick the pace, eventually aiming to just slop along to the fence, pop it and amble off afterwards. To start with she just rushed and had them down, but soon got the idea and started to slow herself, but never to the extent that I would say was right, but she was relaxed and didnt bounce and cleared the fence as before.
I think because she naturally has the most uphill canter, unless she is working in an outline, when you take a slight hold she comes right up in front and bounces.
So having played around with both methods, wondered what people on here thought? She jumped 3 rounds the other weekend, the first 2 using the second approach, but the 3rd ended up using the first as the fences were not big enough at this point to demand her respect and she was going too quick.
Thanks