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cadence

Fun gymnastic in preparation for shows

Droits d'accès: 
Abonné
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This course that alternates straight lines and successive turns, is an excellent gymnastic to break down a course  and prepare each part of it. Despite the difficulty of this exercise, it is safe and it will become fun for the horse and rider.

Niveau de difficulté: 
Intermédiaire
Goal: 

This course that alternates straight lines and successive turns, is an excellent gymnastic to break down a course  and prepare each part of it. Despite the difficulty of this exercise, it is safe and it will become fun for the horse and rider.

Too often, riders wander in the ring with no specific requirement. The horse drifts one meter to the right or to the left, and the rider doesn’t take any action in response to it. This lack of commitment is a vice leading to setbacks in competitions. Therefore, it is important to become aware of it when schooling via some specific exercises as the one Michel introduces in today’s lesson.

 

The challenge of this exercise lies in staying on a precise marked track. The rider has to be accurate and has to stay balanced in order to follow the track. At the same time, the rider can test his capability to have a large angle view, to keep the same rhythm, to prepare his actions, and follow the movement between the straight line and the curve where the horse has to change lead. A very interesting exercise for the rider to practise a range of possible movements.
 

Progress: 

During this session, Michel teaches Charlotte and her new horse Tito, a 7YO gelding.

Charlotte starts at a trot in order to discover the exercise’s set-up. Then she practises it over ground poles at a canter. The first rounds at a trot are useful to set-up the correct cues between the rider and the horse. Michel advises the student on her position to prevent the horse to lean inside or run out. We can notice that each time the rider doesn’t anticipate her movements correctly, her horse tracks out.
 

After few successful rounds, Michel sets up some cavalettis. Charlotte has to focus on her eyes to avoid staring at the fences or at the object that marks the track. Then, they will practise the same exercise with a stronger canter. The goal is to come closer to the condition of a course where difficulties come one after another which can amplify the rider’s weaknesses.
 

By the end, the horse and rider get a full work having fun.

Cours associés

Calm and regularity on a precise line

Droits d'accès: 
Abonné
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This exercise is a good transition between flat work and jumpiong. It is especially beneficial for horses who have tendency to rush the jumps, as it encourages them to jump in a calm and relaxed way.

Niveau de difficulté: 
Intermédiaire
Goal: 

To be successful in this exercise, the rider will seek as much lightness as possible in his body motion and his aids: a steady contact with the reins, little leg, lots of fluidity to follow the movement of the canter…

Progress: 

If the rider has to push the horse on the approach, or pull on the landing, then the exercise is useless. The goal is not to jump no matter what, but foremost, to be able to reach a cadence and a precise track with minimal aids.

Variant / Progression: 

Exercise for control of the line to be done in three gaits. Start with one bar on the circle, then add the others after each passage. The rider should keep the same rhythm along the whole trace and the same attitude over each pole.

Cours associés

The quality canter

Droits d'accès: 
Membre
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Being capable of riding one’s horse towards a jump, starting with a pole on the ground, calm and straight, and maintaining a quality canter, is at the basis of all training.

Niveau de difficulté: 
Débutant
Contenu du dossier: 

 

Being capable of riding one’s horse towards a jump, starting with a pole on the ground, calm and straight, and maintaining a quality canter, is at the basis of all training. When I come across a problem with a horse, before actually trying to solve the problem on the fence itself, my first reaction is to analyse the quality of its canter. I very soon discover that this is where the solution lies. A horse that canters correctly will find jumping much easier. It is simple to recognise the quality of a canter: you should feel as if the horse itself is moving forward and at the slightest request from the rider it is capable of lengthening or shortening its stride and of turning left or right. With a good canter, the rider no longer needs to do anything to ensure that the horse keeps the same rhythm or remains on the right track.
There is instead a problem, if one constantly needs to use one’s legs to keep the pace, or one’s hands to correct its direction when turning.
The same of course applies whatever the gait.
Of course, some horses are naturally endowed with a quality canter. These same horses, whether free in a field, lunged or mounted, usually have excellent balance, change leads easily and carry themselves proudly moving with extremely elasticity. They are also usually well built with
an expressive head, an extended neck carried high, a taut back and
hindquarters well underneath. These horses are capable of galloping over damp and slippery ground without studs.
The ideal horse, however, is rare. Although not all horses are endowed with these qualities, luckily it is possible to teach them to canter correctly by suppling and muscle-building exercises.

Once again, one must not look for excuses, horses with problems such as bad balance, pulling, bolting, changes of rhythm, are in most cases the results of the rider’s own attitude. To teach my pupils the awareness of a quality canter, I prefer to have them ride on a circle. I ask them to lengthen and shorten the horse’s stride, to execute sharp turns on increasingly smaller circles.
In the beginning, if I ask them: «Are you ready to slow down?... To turn left? ...» the answer is generally: «No». This happens simply because the rider, due to his mental and physical attitude, only has one choice: turning right or left. In his mind nothing else matters, to the detriment of all the rest.
It is instead important to have an overall view of the current situation, to be open-minded and ready for any-thing. Even being prepared to do the opposite of what one is doing: if one is ready to slow down, one must be ready to accelerate; if ready to accelerate one, must be ready to halt. To achieve this, the rider must always maintain the centred position, allow-ing one to deal with any eventuality. If you are cantering correctly, you do not only have one, but thousands of possibilities, try it out! Test this!
The exercise I consider the simplest consists in cantering on a circle with a diameter measuring between 15 and 20 metres. I begin by placing two wings without poles on the course. The rider must ride between the wings maintaining the same cadence at a working canter. I then place a pole on the ground between the wings asking the rider to remain in the same frame of mind before, during and after riding over the pole on the ground. The pole is the horse’s problem, not the rider’s. Consider that for the rider this pole only has the importance one gives it. The same in fact applies to all fences.
Once the pole on the ground has been ridden over with no change in the canter, one can put up a cross-pole, then an upright, while always bearing in mind that it is not the fence that is important but the regularity of
the canter.
To re-establish these conditions on each landing, I ask the rider to remain concentrated, imagining that after this fence there is a large oxer to be jumped.
When a quality canter is obtained, jumping becomes easy. Problems caused by strides and distances become practically non-existent.
There is nothing left for the rider to do: no need to use one’s legs, one’s hands, no need to become agitated, only the need to think, to control speed and direction. The priority is to maintain this canter until the take-off point, and to be able to analyse what happens, including when landing.

Contrary to one’s habits, often acquired but rarely corrected by riders and instructors, it is important to maintain a clear mind (a wide-angle view) after each jump. Problems arise mainly due to a lack of discipline on landing: «Oof !... I’ve jumped the fence», and the rider gives up. From that moment on, the horse no longer feels his presence and can decide for itself and continue as it pleases.
Get into the habit of carrying out little verification tests. When landing after a fence, check that you are able to stop or to come back to the walk, or to ask for a flying change at a certain precise spot.

 

Extract of the book "Secrets and method of a great champion"

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