Ride With a Natural Seat: You Can Too! by Michele Morseth, MA, GCFP
ABSTRACT: Riders can ride for years without ever really moving in unity with the motion of their horse. However, you can learn new habits and posture so you ride in secure comfort. You are not your habits and at any age you can become fluid in your movement and more…
Added by Sit_the_Trot on July 27, 2009 at 7:00pm — No Comments
Added by SPANA on July 20, 2009 at 9:00am — No Comments
Hello Everyone!
People send me riding and training questions from all over the world and I look forward to sharing some of my answers with all of you!
Dear Julie,
Please explain to me the rein aids for English and Western. I would like to know which ones to use for each discipline and what is the difference. For example, direct and…
Added by Julie Goodnight on July 17, 2009 at 9:30am — No Comments
If you only use your hands when putting your horse on the bit, you're making one of the biggest mistakes you can make. By focusing on the head and "getting the head down", you'll just be creating an artificial "head-set".
Putting your horse on the bit has nothing to do with "head sets". Physically, it's a round silhouette that occurs when you ride your…
Added by Jane Savoie on July 17, 2009 at 9:00am — 7 Comments
Added by Sarah at HorseJobs.ca on May 20, 2009 at 1:00pm — 2 Comments
Added by Sarah at HorseJobs.ca on May 19, 2009 at 10:30pm — 1 Comment
To understand and work with your horse’s stride length, keep in mind that whilst you are riding, the horse’s legs are your legs, and your brain needs to react to what they are doing.
Try this exercise:
Build two fences five canter strides apart. Warm up your horse, thinking about the canter rhythm.
As a very simple way of understanding your horse’s stride length, call out the strides as you ride the fences. This will help your brain tune in to what your horse…
Added by Tim Stockdale on May 1, 2009 at 9:00am — No Comments
WHY DO WE TRAIN
I have would like to put across to you some part of my philosophy with regard to the very important subject of why we train. I have also given some part of this blog to what to look for in a good trainer.
BEFORE WE START TO TRAIN OUR HORSES I BELIEVE THAT A DEEPER UNDERSTANDING OF THE REASONS BEHIND TRAINING ARE MADE CLEAR.
What about human beings?
All of us human beings are capable of certain moderately athletic functions which…
Added by Ernest Dillon on April 30, 2009 at 5:30am — 2 Comments
There is no doubt about it...we need to put our top equestrian brains together and come up with a new design for the horse's head with six main aims:
THE DESIGN BRIEF
1 We need to desensitise the area around the poll.
2 Make the top jaw narrower or the bottom jaw wider so they are both the same width.
3 Move the exit point for the motor and sensory nerves that is just under the cavesson noseband.
4 Fuse and strengthen the delicate ends of the bones at the…
Added by William Micklem on April 3, 2009 at 11:00am — 25 Comments
Hello,
This weeks' participating rider sent in a very technical description of her question. You can see her description in the comments section of last weeks' blog. She gave me some excellent and specific information, but I wanted to hasten to encourage you that you don't have to be as technical. Just a description of what's happening when you ride that you'd like addressed with some unmounted suggestions, and a few photos suffices..even if you don't have a photo, we can still work…
Added by Heather Sansom at Equifitt.com on April 1, 2009 at 11:00am — 4 Comments
One of the discussion topics in the past week on this site has been around the problem of legs creeping forward when you ride. From what I see in clinics, this problem spans disciplines- it doesn't seem to matter whether you're in an English or Western saddle. Getting that heel more aligned under your hips is a challenge.
If you look at the past three weeks' worth of Ride Better/Ride Fit! blogs, each of the three riders in the examples also shared this problem.
The…
Added by Heather Sansom at Equifitt.com on March 24, 2009 at 3:30pm — 10 Comments
Hello, It's great to see how many people are practicing some off-horse fitness activity during the week to help their riding. You've posted some encouraging comments. If you recognize yourself in some of the photo examples- that's great! Don't be shy about sending in your photos or posting some video footage of your ride. I won't be analysing your riding overall...just providing feedback on things you can…
ContinueAdded by Heather Sansom at Equifitt.com on March 18, 2009 at 11:00am — No Comments
Now that we have thought about rider position, flexion, and getting the horse to move away from your leg, it's time to move on to your horse's canter.
Canter, rhythm and balance is very important for a show jumper and he should be able to maintain it without too much interference from the rider. For our sport you need a horse whose strongest pace, his favourite pace if you like, is canter as most of the work is done in canter.
Many of us over-ride our horses in canter…
Added by Tim Stockdale on March 14, 2009 at 9:30am — 2 Comments
Greetings, my many Barnmice friends, from Riversong Ranch in Alberta. It is so good to be home again after this latest whirlwind trip to Bermuda and the Netherlands.
While I love my job when I am in the arena with the students and horses, what I am getting increasingly tired of is flying. The “friendly skies” are just not all that user friendly anymore.
So it was while enduring the 8 hour flight from Amsterdam to Toronto only to then connect for the 4 ½ hour flight from…
Added by Chris Irwin on March 13, 2009 at 8:00pm — 8 Comments
Ok, so I've been riding western pleasure the past few years and have decided to change over to an jumping. In what kind of equipment/attire will I need? And how expensive will this switchover be? Oh, and I've been looking around and there are all different styles and colors of breeches... Is there a certain type I'm looking for?? When I looked this stuff up on the internet, I got different answers from almost every site I looked at! ...I'm a little confused. Can anyone out there tell me what…
ContinueAdded by amy on March 3, 2009 at 7:00pm — 4 Comments
How well do you warm up and cool down your horse?
Warming up your horse prior to working him must not only be in his body, but also in his mind, getting him mentally prepared for the work he is going to do.
Put simply, warming up is getting the horse ready, relaxed and prepared for accepting what you are going to say to him. Time spent warming up will also allow you to release your own tight muscles and warm up as a rider.
During the warm up process, you will…
Added by Tim Stockdale on February 26, 2009 at 8:00pm — 3 Comments
The Fine Art of Letting Go or Making Go
By Chris Irwin
Hello and greetings to all from Pearson airport in Toronto. As I type these words I’m sitting beside my lovely wife, Kathryn, waiting to board our early morning flight to Bermuda. For the next five days I’ll be coaching dressage riders and jumpers on this small island nation in the Atlantic before flying next week to the Netherlands for the first European Train the…
Added by Chris Irwin on February 26, 2009 at 3:00pm — 2 Comments
I travel from horse show to horse show and see poor-fitting saddle pads all the time. Not enough by itself, some misguided riders often combine a too-short saddle pad with a thick halfpad, creating even more pressure points.
Imagine wearing flip flops where the back of your foot hangs out by an inch. Now go walk for 10 minutes. Comfy? I don’t think so.
So how to avoid that:
1. Buy a saddle pad that fits your…
Added by Patricia at ECOGOLD on February 24, 2009 at 10:30am — 1 Comment
Before you even ask your horse to do a flying change, there are a number of requirements that should come easily to you and your horse.
1. Can the horse do collected, medium and extended canter?
2. Can the horse do a clean canter walk canter transition? (no trot steps)
3. Can the horse…
Added by Ruth Hogan Poulsen on February 19, 2009 at 7:00am — No Comments
Correct Fundamentals help you "do the right things right".
As a rider, you need to put the fundamentals in place so that the right things happen by habit. Good riders ride well, because their right habits are so ingrained into their philosophy and their thought processes that they do routine things without thinking.
Developing the correct habits…
Added by Tim Stockdale on February 16, 2009 at 6:00pm — 3 Comments
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