

Then as I schooled her more we reached a very fine cadenced trot which she would maintain for as long as I asked her to do. Another thing to experiment with is to go into corners by using only the upper torso of your body to turn into a corner then straighten the torso on the straight away to the next corner.Īt the beginning of schooling my Candandy she would careen around that arena at a very fast trot. The body cues are a matter of slowing down the movement of the body to slow down the horse's forward compulsion. To begin with I had learned from my short stint of Dressage training in using my body/bio-mechanics to cue my horse before using the other cues such as reining and voice cues. The size of the arena was about 50ft on two sides and 60 ft on the other two sides. I had access to a smallish arena an a local boarding facility owned by a friend of mine. This is a situation I'm well versed in with my QH mare. Some horses think of more exercise as work and punishment, others thoroughly enjoy it and see it as a reward. CDM, je le connais également, mais malgré lassistance soutenue du concepteur, je n. RRTC est, me semble-t-il, un logiciel pour très grand réseau, ou réseau de club. If you ask for your horse to slow down a little each time, without introducing something completely new and expecting him to catch on, he should start to really respect your seat.Īs with trotting all depends on the horse. Jai réussi à obtenir linscription sur le forum de Itrain sans devoir télécharger le logiciel à lessai, ceci étant une obligation pour le concepteur anglais je pense. You have to ask for a slow trot every time you ride-you can't just let your horse trot super-fast every time you ride and then ask for him to cut his tempo in half the day before a show. Molly, for example, will always try to stretch the speed I've given her, to test if my mind is set, and she gives up on speeding up when she realizes that I'm not going to give her a faster tempo or more energy from my seat.Ĭonsistency is also key. Horses don't like to be out of sync with your body they will usually conform to your pace if you know what you're doing. After re-training three OTTBs, I have to say it's all in the posting and consistency.
