Tip/Quote of the Day!
Tip/Quote of the Day # 2341
The opening rein acts like a vacuum, moving the horse's shoulders easily as desired, especially when supported by the opposite leg and rein.
Tip/Quote of the Day!
The opening rein acts like a vacuum, moving the horse's shoulders easily as desired, especially when supported by the opposite leg and rein.
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"They asked me at the Seminar, how should a horse look when it is coming towards you? I said to them, if you meet someone and they are looking you in the eyes, a little bit proud, nose up, not arrogant, but someone coming to you, giving you their
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"In the counter canter, ride small tempo changes so the counter canter develops the same stride length as the normal canter." ~ Johan Hamminga
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"We must listen to the horse. Collect a little, and if he becomes stiff in his top line, go out [of it]." ~ Johan Hamminga
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"I find it better to often have short, intensive moments – ten or fifteen minutes – not longer, then a break to allow the muscles to recover. If you want the horse to carry more weight, then you need time for muscle recovery." ~ Johan Hamminga
Tip/Quote of the Day!
When the rider starts to waterski off of a horse's mouth, the horse generally obliges and becomes the motorboat.
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"The horse should understand 3 things from the rider's leg: forward, bend, move over. Until the rider understands this the horse can't, so they can't get inside leg to outside rein. Most riders/horses only understand using a driving leg." ~ Susan Moessner
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"The forehand is not to be raised by the rider's hands ! This mania of trying to ride a horse with a 'Grand-prix neck', a horse who moves with Training level hindquarters, is abominable." ~ Charles de Kunffy
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"Riders just worry about the horse’s head – but the horse has a hindquarter, a shoulder, and a head and neck. The rider’s lower leg controls the hindquarter, to a certain extent the shoulder is positioned by the legs and hands, and the head and neck are controlled
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"It’s the self-questioning, self-doubting rider that gets the least/worst responses from the horses." ~ Nicole Cotten Ackerman
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"One can never, I believe, strive for a lack of criticism in riding – because I don’t think that there is such a thing as perfect riding. I don’t think anybody’s performance is beyond some sort of criticism." ~ Tad Coffin
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"Nevertheless the freedom of the shoulders in all gaits is always only the result of elevation, and this in turn is the result of the hindquarters carrying the correct weight." Gustav Steinbrecht