Tip/Quote of the Day!
Tip/Quote of the Day # 3159
"At the sitting trot everyone wants to stop themselves from bouncing. What you have to do is let yourself go with the flow of the horse." ~ Charlotte Dujardin
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"At the sitting trot everyone wants to stop themselves from bouncing. What you have to do is let yourself go with the flow of the horse." ~ Charlotte Dujardin
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"An engaged hind leg is the foundation that allows you to stretch the horse at a moment’s notice without him falling on his forehand." ~ Felicitas von Neumann-Cosel
Tip/Quote of the Day!
Shoulder fore is one of the best tools that you have for closing your horse up from behind (in collection.)
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"Concentrate on the transitions, forward and back, build the activity from behind. When you bring the horse slightly back, you still have to push her forward to the hand, you can keep riding as long as you can feel the hind legs in your hand." ~ Susanne Miesner
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"The true joy for the good dressage rider is found in watching a horse develop mentally and physically through successful training." ~ Felicitas von Neumann-Cosel
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"Never leave a resistant horse without reconciliation, even if you had to treat it very strictly on that particular day. Do not put it away until it obeys, but then a friendly relationship must be restored between trainer and horse. Always adhere to the principle: "The punishment is
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"True straightness can only be approached when managed in conjunction with the other elemental structures of riding in which it is inextricably housed: forward and calm." ~ Erik Herbermann
Tip/Quote of the Day!
You cannot hide your fear or lack of understanding from a horse. They always know.
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"When the horse is appropriately collected for the level of his test, the work looks easy." ~ Arthur Kottas-Heldenberg
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"Just as the sculptor at first chisels the future outlines of his work of art with powerful blows out of the crude block of stone, and then lets it develop in increasingly finer detail in all its beauty, the aids of the rider must also become more and more
Tip/Quote of the Day!
The use of the indirect inside rein to keep the horse from falling in is a crutch, and should only be used very briefly, if at all. Teach the horse to stand up straight by being obedient to the leg aids instead.
Tip/Quote of the Day!
"Lengthen the horse's top line so the bottom can engage. Any contracture of the top line will be counterproductive."