Thursday, November 8, 2007

Half halts are us...

Today's lesson was fun. Alando was gone (to a lesson with Kim's daughter I think) and Glory was still in heat. Jessie was easy to catch still, he came right up to the gate as usual, as did Glory. She was especially hard to shoo away today, but I got her moved away and we got ready. It's been nice not having to deal with a muddy horse before a lesson, it hasn't rained for two weeks. Of course, now that I said that, it will probably pour between now and Sunday.

Jessie was calling a lot for his pasture buddies so we worked on a lot of showmanship while getting him warmed up. After he was focusing on me I took the opportunity to undo his girth and move the saddle forward a couple of inches and tighten the girth again. The showmanship made a huge difference in his demeanor though, he was quiet and easy to walk on a loose rein. So we warmed up, having trouble with long and low because he was tense and fast, but overall pretty nice.

Once Kim arrived we started the real work and began with working on our trot around the whole arena. Jessie wasn't bending well so we worked on sidepassing arcs, but making sure to take a step that was both forward and sideways each time, not just sideways and not backwards in any way. We added the whip, though I only had to use it once, just to remind Jessie that he was to respond to my leg. Then we worked more on trotting and bending...

Jessie was a little fast, so we worked on BIG half halts. Basically I was to think and ask for halt, and then asking for the forward trot again. Once he got his rhythm down and to a more reasonable rate we were able to concentrate on bending and started doing a 10 meter circle once we reached the wall. After doing a good circle we would stay on the rail in shoulder in.

We have progressed enough at the shoulder in that I am no longer allowed to celebrate doing it right after we finish and just let him go. Now I need to continue riding and straighten him back onto the track so that we can ride deep into the corner. No more riding forward quickly and not caring what the short side looks like, lol. After doing that in both directions we went back on the 20 meter circle, alternating between sitting trot and canter. I worked on getting him to be more responsive and more quickly. Most transitions were done while crossing the centerline on the 20 meter circle at B. The big focus was not bracing with my hands, allowing him to stay round and supple, while also making sure we kept the proper bend and sinking my weight into my seat for the downward transitions. Then for the upward we got to the point where I would just weight my inside seat bone and think about sliding my outside leg back a bit and he would canter. Our upward transitions were much nicer than the downward transitions. We worked on that in both directions and then we were done.

We only had one walk break, so I think it was a good sign that our fitness is improving. Next week will be a real test, there are no classes on Monday so I'll be doing a lesson on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday. Craig is going to come video/photograph Monday's lesson so I should be able to post pictures. We'll play with the videocamera so that hopefully I'll be able to video my own lessons after that and get screenshots for pictures.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Counter Canter Fun

Well, last night's lesson was interesting. Jessie started the evening out thinking he was the Black Stallion. Apparently his girlfriend is in heat, and his buddy Alando and him were running her around the paddock. So he was NOT happy to be coming in to the barn to get tacked up. He was calling his head off the whole time I was tacking him up. Fortunately as soon as I got on him he chilled out other than feeling like he was going to explode at any moment. He was quiet at least. It felt weird period because I was wearing my new polar fleece breeches (thanks QH Congress!). We got warmed up, though didn't accomplish much long and low because he was ready to defend his mare that wasn't present.

We started off with trotting some circles and working on spiraling. He was very tense and not bending well at all, when Kim and I had a discussion about my inside leg. I just wasn't getting it far enough forward, trying shoulder in at the canter down the long side was a disaster in the sense that Jessie would do a flying lead change rather than maintain the inside lead and shoulder in. So after she tried putting my leg in the proper position for me to see we realized that I couldn't get my leg ON him even if it was far enough forward. That's when we decided my saddle was too far BACK. Who would have thought it possible?!?

So I hopped off and we moved the saddle forward and I remounted. It was amazing, Jessie bent just with my leg being on him with the saddle in the new position. I was able to ask for the bend at the beginning of his rib cage, instead of the end of it, where my leg was naturally. So we tried more circles and then shoulder in along the long side. It became very obvious very quickly that even with the saddle in the correct place I still had trouble keeping my right leg far enough forward, because we were nearly perfect to the left and he kept changing to the right. So we got it better and then moved on to a similar exercise. A shallow loop along the long side of the arena, at the canter, staying on the same lead the entire time.

We started going counter clockwise and it was apparent that now was not the time to be an over-achiever. While the goal (from First Level Test 4 I believe Kim said) is to meet the centerline at X there was no way we were going to get it right out of the gate. After I finally accepted exactly how shallow my loop had to be we did very well on the left lead. So we reversed and tried it to the right, where the degree of forwardness my right leg needed became very apparent. One thing this exercise taught me is that flying changes are VERY easy for Jessie. We ended after one final good go to the right. Leaving us with a lot to work on, mainly me, lol. It was a great lesson. Afterwards I continued my trend of cleaning my tack after every ride. Fortunately the barn is pretty warm so between that and my polar fleece it wasn't too bad. I also checked out the ponies that Kim had bought over the weekend.

Also, a sidenote...we finally got tivo talking properly to the cable box and we now get Robert Dover's Search for America's Next Equestrian Star! I did see the first episode on youtube and it was great. There are two left, but I'm hoping tivo can find reruns at some point, unless I get episodes two and three on youtube. I highly recommend it for those of you that get the Fox Reality Channel.

Saturday, November 3, 2007

Dressage eye candy...

As I begin following a strict budget to save for whatever horse may be in the cards to replace Jessie, I have still been window browsing online. One of my favorite sites I already talked about, and that, of course, is tack of the day. They have dressage bridles ALLLLLL weekend, so that made me wander over to my favorite dressage gear site, http://www.dressageextensions.com/ , Dressage Extensions. I've been good and haven't bought anything, but thought I'd share, since I have no riding post to make. Hopefully I'll get out to the barn tomorrow...and with any luck, might come back with some pictures!

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Shoulder in progress!

We had a great lesson today. We rode in the outdoor...first time and it was in the mid 50s so I was expecting a hyper horse since he was calling for his true love, Alando. But he was a good boy, just forward. Not very responsive to my leg though, so Kim brought me a dressage whip and that woke Jessie up. I used it twice maybe, but just knowing I had it got him moving off my leg. We worked some on leg yielding and staying straight doing it, then we moved on to the elusive shoulder in. It actually went very well. I finally *got* my upper body position and Jessie carried himself nicely. I probably should have asked him to be a bit more active, but he maintained his rhythm and forward motion. He was soft and round and bent correctly, so I just let him be and stayed out of his way. It helped that we started in each corner with a 10 meter circle before moving on to do a shoulder in on the long side, so we already had the correct bend before moving "straight". It was like he was gliding...very cool feeling.

I posted about having trouble "feeling" when it was right and this was someone's response, it was a good summary of everything Kim has told me, so I wanted to put it here, for further reference for myself once Kim flys South for the winter.

"Leg yield should be performed with an almost straight body and just a bit of flexion. The rider should think; forward step, sidways step, forward step, sideways step. The shoulder leads slightly in the leg yield...meaning...if you're going from quarterline to wall and someone was standing at the head of the horse, they would see that the horse's shoulder is slightly closer to the wall than the haunches. The horse crosses it's inside fore and inside hind over the outside ones with each step. I've heard different things about the leg aids, particularly the inside leg...some will say that leg is at the girth, others will stay it's slightly behind the girth. The outside leg though is slightly behind the girth. The rider's shoulders and hips face forward, though the aids are 'diagnonal'. The rider may sit a touch heavier on the outside seatbone. Inside hand provides flexion, outside hand controls the bend and pace. The rider asks the horse to move laterally into the outside hand.

Shoulder-in is performed with bend through the ribcage as if the horse is going to perform a 10m circle. The horse's shoulder is moved to the 'inside' track causing the inside front leg to cross over the outside front leg. The hind legs do NOT cross because the haunches stay moving straight ahead on the original track. The rider's shoulders will be turned towards the inside mimicking the horse's shoulders, while their hips remain pointing 'straight ahead' also mimicking the horse, his hips in this case. The inside leg is at the girth to create the bend AND to push the horse laterally into the outside hand which controls the bend. Outside leg is behind the girth to prevent the haunches from fall out and keep the horse moving forward. One might also weight the inside seatbone slightly. "