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Lorien Stable: Trainer's Notes Welcome. Enjoy. For discussion of this article, or any other topic, visit the Message Board. |
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In order to get off the forehand, the horse has to take more weight on
his hind end. There is a quite simple method of teaching him to do this
right after a jump. What you do is you take the jump, and then halt.
In order to halt, he has to rock back. If a horse is expecting to halt after a jump--or is at least prepared to halt, if asked--it will be much easier to collect him and balance him. You will find it easier to get his attention and ask him to do...well, whatever you're planning next. It particularly helps when you want to make a tight turn right after jumping, for example to double back and take a jump close to the one you just took. Remember as you work on this exercise that it is not easy for the horse. He has to use a lot of muscles he's not used to using; if he were used to using them, he'd already be nicely balanced as he lands. So don't expect results right away--don't even expect him to understand the idea right away. In your first session, you may go five strides before you can get a halt. In your next session, perhaps three strides and then a halt. You should eventually be able to halt within a stride of your landing. |
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Rushing At Jumps: If you are dealing with a horse who rushes at jumps out of anticipation, then you want to remove that anticipation. He assumes that he will jump any jump he is pointed towards. So what you do is: you point him at a jump and then DO NOT jump it. The previous exercise comes in handy here. You see, one of the first things you can do is go over the first jump, make the horse STOP between the two jumps, and then...flip a coin to decide whether you go over the next jump. Sometimes do, sometimes don't. Sometimes go left, sometimes go right. Don't give the horse a predictable pattern to follow; you're trying to teach him NOT to anticipate. |
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You have several other exercises which you can use to encourage him to
focus on you, rather than trying to anticipate and rush the jumps.
You can ride a wiggly line between jumps; if he doesn't know where he's going, he can't rush. This is a depiction of riding a serpentine of two loops between two jumps; you can get very creative about the route you take from one jump to the next, though the jumps are in a straight line. |
| You can ride a bending line. If he can't even see the jump when you land, then won't assume he is going to jump it, and he won't rush it. By jumping him over jumps he can't anticipate, he will learn to listen to you, rather than to anticipate. |
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You can also ride a double bending line. You have several options with
the double bending line: |
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