Monday, June 22, 2009

Back on Track






Monday, June 22, 2009
Roode’s back to work and he’s loaded with energy to burn. After six weeks off, he has started back stronger than I expected. I only started trotting and a little bit of canter for Herr Schmidt to have a look. After 10 minutes Herr Schmidt said he looked very good and to slowly now bring him back up to his work level. That permission granted nearly made me want to cry minor tears of joy. I was so happy! I can tell Roode feels happy too. Standing in a box is no fun. The best part is that he does not feel below where we left off. He certainly feels unfit. He’s winded after five minutes and a little unbalanced. But, the best part is that he was so nicely over the back from the beginning with this incredible feeling of engagement and natural swinging. I could feel it and then also see it in the mirror. What I could see in the mirror (trot) was both hind legs engaging with a short moment of suspension in the air before touching the ground again for the next stride. It is such a wonderful feeling. When you experience a trot like this, I think it proves the saying, “To be one with the horse”. I can feel it in my back as Roode just pounds out the rhythm. To me it feels as though the horse is lifting me and I’m lifting the horse off the ground every stride. I’m surprised at how thru my half halts were today also. I was able to control the amount of swinging and impulsion that kept coming. The important part of today is that I was not asking for impulsion anyway. It was just there. I came to realize that within the first trot around the ring, my thinking was wrong. What I was originally thinking was ‘As I pick up the next gait, keep in mind not push too hard. Just let him jog it out and see how it feels.’ Then feeling took over and I was suddenly thinking, ‘well he’s great! He’s really pumping a rhythm here, what I need is a half halt without losing the throughness and impulsion.’ Maybe the first time, I gave a half halt a little too strong and he suddenly found it as a good time to walk again. But with quick and subtle correction we were back on track without difficulty. I really love the way he felt today.
What exercises have you found helpful to improving your horses canter? Any one or two aspects in your approach that have made the most difference?
The exercises that I find most helpful for improving the canter are:
a) On a twenty meter circle and on the straight lines from the beginning, I must have control over the height of the neck. I must get the feeling at all times that the horse wants to go down. And if not, then that is all I can work on before moving on. With a horse that does not want to put the head down and come over the back, I believe then it needs to be exaggerated to put the head more down. It’s not the best feeling. Most horses have an issue finding the balance down there. It feels like they want to break the canter. The tempo can get hectic and the rhythm fast. It feels like there’s a lack in the ability to half halt and to steady the line of flexion. In Roode’s case, he shuffles to ease the work load it requires. I find that if it gets a little jarring, it is important to feel how to push beyond that, because at that point they are cheating the way of becoming thru and they are just running. With time and just experiencing the feeling, the horse quickly finds the balance and gains strength. The rider does also. It’s really just a matter of days and only 5- 10 minutes. Keep the gait 3 beat, whether it’s too slow or too hectic. I had the problem with Roode becoming too hectic when I first came. Herr Schmidt told me it does not matter in the beginning that the horse gets hectic as long as he is round and wants to go down. He told me that once this was accomplished then I could work on half halting to balance him more behind and bring the neck up, as long as the feeling that the horse wants to go down maintained. I think it creates a truly wonderful feeling after taking the time to push thru what challenges it seems can come with doing this exercise. And then give a good walk break before moving on. With Roode, I have found a greater degree of steadiness has come from this exercise. Attachment- I feel an incredible amount of positive attachment has come from this exercise. I get the feeling that my legs lie more closely and evenly to his sides and that I can sit in more without disturbing the throughness but to make it better. I get the feeling that I can feel how the mouth, hand, and hind leg attachment move together in balance. I then get the feeling that I can control whatever I may ask for as I work up the level of difficulty in the canter exercises. It creates a feeling of partnership.
b) To improve the canter more, I have learned that the next exercise is to do 12, 10, or 8 meter circles on the long side, preferably at E or B but wherever need be. I have felt and watched how this simple exercise can make horses so much stronger and improve the quality of the canter. I find it helps to build the uphill strength that Dressage requires and it’s a necessary set up for the bend that is required in the canter half passes and the pirouettes. It is important to merely just experience tons of small circles in the canter. It is important to NOT train them to exhaustion. It is too hard on the joints. The purpose is that you use them as a method to gymnasticise the horse’s body to make it stronger so that it will be easy to move on to the difficult movements. The reason to do them on the long side wall is because it provides support with space. It is important to know your line and the geography of the circle. I see Herr Schmidt ride 8 and 10 meter circles everyday right before he moves on to the half passes and pirouettes. Sometimes, he’ll only do one, and then he moves on to the movement because it was good enough. Sometimes he’ll do more. It simply depends on the feeling. And as simple as it sounds, I love this exercise. I have found with more practice that it confirms the end feeling that I described in part A. It is more difficult. It requires more awareness to feeling and a quicker effectiveness in the riding. With Roode, I find that I suddenly need more outside rein to make him through, to keep the neck low and turning on my line. The inside rein keeps the jaw soft and sideways (flexion), as H.S. says.
c) The third is moving more forward and collection on the straight line or the bent line. This is where I get a bit hectic. I find H.S. always saying, “Relax, relax, relax….ruhig (calm)” as his head is cocked funny and he’s watching my tension fade. When I actually understand the feeling, it’s very simple to train. I’m still learning, but I think I’ve about nailed it. It requires a feeling of sitting in a bit more and coming with a relaxed half halt at the same moment. It is the same to me for as much forward as you push and for as much collection as you push. When the feeling is correct, I feel I can do anything. I can finally even count the strides in the pirouettes. Before, it was always like an undercurrent pulling me (not a good feeling). I get the feeling now that I have gained more control merely by once again just experiencing the pirouette. I can now number my half halts and they are effective. I can almost control how many strides to take to get around. I can just feel more. On the other hand there is much update to be desired for further information and learning on this matter. The point is, Roode has a very good canter now and this, I feel, has also improved it.



Thursday, March 5, 2009

I Apologize

I have been without internet for the past 2.5 weeks and have dropped off the face of the Earth. I am sitting in London trying to update as much as I can at this moment. I have a lot to catch up. Sorry for the inconvenience and I will try my best! Have a great day!

Tuesday, March 3, 2009


Today was the first sunny day in I don’t know how long. The air is crisp and the birds are singing. I have seen the first buds of spring on trees and I think I’ve smiled more today than all of last week.
I watched Herr Schmidt ride one horse this morning before I decided it was just too nice outside to be standing and watching inside. So I hacked Roode on the unfrozen roads and we both greatly enjoyed it.
My lesson with H.S. was super. I really think I am going to have a breakthrough soon. In the beginning I could feel that Roode was just a bit lethargic. So I really pushed him over the edge today. I thought even though the feeling was not so great I needed to do something to make the quality better because I have been waiting for him to become stronger and show me a difference but today I just thought he was really taking advantage of my training skills. I thought ‘If my own position gets out of place then Herr Schmidt will yell about it and that’s fine but today I am going for it’. Herr Schmidt actually commended me for good riding today, which is actually very rare. I think I was actually good on my part with being steady and feeling more. It was Roode that was rocking the boat. I just sat there and pushed through it. I didn’t let my guards down this time. I was impressed at how he looked in the mirror. The quality was really great. If I keep this up then the quality is bound to become instinctive soon enough and we can count on it from the beginning.
The movements were not such a big deal to me today but they were a better show of what Roode can do when he works it. Herr Schmidt yelled at one point that he has a really good trot. The bending was better in the half passes and the canter pirouettes were a bit more difficult today just because Roode felt sore from the good collected work that he did yesterday. Also, we did the pirouette work toward the end of the lesson and by then Roode was a bit worked up into a white lather on the neck. But it was good for him.

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

I had an early lesson today. I was successful at keeping Roode relaxed and nice in the movements but I felt like the more I tried to push for better quality and all the cadence and schwung that Herr Schmidt keeps talking about, Roode only became a little quicker in the tempo.
The canter quality feels better than the trot now. Who would have ever thought, I know. The trot has not been as good as I know it can be. There is some kind of standard that H.S. has and I get the feeling that I will get there soon. Roode can do it and I will come to the point where I won’t accept anything less than his best. Otherwise, it was good for a Monday.
This Friday March 5th, I will meet Kyra Kyrklund and spend the day watching her in the U.K. I am so excited. Then the rest of the weekend will be spent sleepless in London.

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

Paula and I woke up at the crack of dawn to drive all the way to Bremen to watch Hubertus ride Larinna in her 2nd Grand Prix. It was so great. They won with a 68.708%. Granted there were not many other international riders to compete against, they were still awesome. And there was a lot of shopping. I got Roode some red shipping boots. The others are too short. I bought myself some black and pick pairs of argyle riding socks of course. And then I got Roode some melon green polo’s. They are bright against a dark horse. They make Roode look black.
On our way back home, we stopped in Verden to explore the German Horse Museum. It was interesting. Unfortunately, I could not read much. Instead, up front I bought an old Reiter und Pferd magazine with Rohdiamant (Roode’s sire) on the front cover. I bought a museum bag and a burlap sack-like bag with the famous Blue Horse Painting on it.
Then for a moment when we arrived home, the sun was out so I put Roode in turnout where he was jubilant and disgustingly wet and dirty after rolling for what seemed like a 100 times.

Saturday, February 28th, 2009

Herr Schmidt is in Bremen with Larinna. So I had Roode to myself today. As I was getting ready to ride, Paula came running and squealing into my barn. She was yelling about how Larinna just placed 3rd in her 1st Grand Prix. It was very exciting. Paula calls Larinna her horse because she knows her from another farm and they are both Swedish.
I only tried to ride Roode the way I thought H.S. would be teaching me if he were there. At some points I was successful and then some I had resistance that may have been helped if he were there. I wanted to just make it an easy day but I couldn’t quit. I did not do any canter pirouettes but I practiced a lot of tempi changes. Everything was good until I came to the twos which suddenly I could only do two and then I don’t know what went wrong. I had him straight but there was some lack of balance being established somewhere.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Another day at Fleyenhof is over. I wish I could re ride this one because it was so great. Roode is getting much stronger and the pirouettes have become very fun to ride. I have become confident enough to warm up on my own and now I can finish it in 10 minutes. Most of the thoughts that go through my mind as I ride the warm up are questions like is his neck low enough to work him over the back? Or are my hands and legs steady? And is he light and loose to the inside? And can I feel him in the outside rein and do I have the ability to half halt?
Roode’s schwung is getting so much better. He is swinging more in the back and I think the cadence has made a drastic change for the better. I love it. I can feel that Roode loves the work too. I give more breaks now too because I feel that we both need a breather after the work we’ve been doing.
4’s, 3’s, and 2’s are flying! I cannot wait to see what these can actually become. I am optimistic and hopeful that with more experience I will develop a better feel for timing with the leg changes and Herr Schmidt can stop saying that it is “my fault” all the time. It is my fault but I just need to keep at them. They are getting much better; I just often miss the last change. My other problem is not keeping Roode straight in the neck. So then the haunches are affected and the whole body becomes crooked. But, I am getting better and the quality of Roode’s gaits has improved immensely. As a funny side note, Herr Schmidt has turned to growling at me when I don’t do something correctly. I think it is a little bit funny but it scares me too.This weekend is a CDI in Bremen. Herr Schmidt is riding and tomorrow I am going to ask if I can go with them. Paula the groom is sure he will say yes but I can only hope. This CDI is about a 3 hour drive with the horses and they will be staying the night. I may have to see about accommodation.

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