We did trot a little and tried the zig zags at the trot and they went very well too. She's so smart and responsive...a dream horse to ride really! We also worked on turn on the forehand, just getting a step or two of sideways with her haunches for now. I'm really excited by how well she responded to those simple exercises, especially since it doesn't seem like the weather is going to improve much anytime soon and we'll be limited due to footing. When we trotted she did much better on keeping contact and staying on the bit, hardly ever ducking behind or anything.
Monday, December 19, 2011
Great ride at the walk...
We did trot a little and tried the zig zags at the trot and they went very well too. She's so smart and responsive...a dream horse to ride really! We also worked on turn on the forehand, just getting a step or two of sideways with her haunches for now. I'm really excited by how well she responded to those simple exercises, especially since it doesn't seem like the weather is going to improve much anytime soon and we'll be limited due to footing. When we trotted she did much better on keeping contact and staying on the bit, hardly ever ducking behind or anything.
Labels:
clinic,
Shoulder In,
turn on the forehand,
zig zags
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Eddo Hoekstra Clinic Notes...Day 2...
After your horse has gotten good at doing SI, HI, SI, HI, SI it is good to start adding renvers and half pass on the long side instead on shallow loops. It's more like you're showing an understanding of the idea of half pass and renvers but not actually going all the way there. Then you can do half pass, half pass, half pass, just changing the direction while staying on your shallow loops. This is good prep for canter from the walk and good prep for flying changes.
At trot try asking for shorter/softer steps for three sides of the ring and then letting the horse out to lengthen for one long side.
If it doesn't come easily it probably isn't worth asking for (this was said in reference to a canter transition from the trot that wasn't so great). Also, if you wait too long to make a correction then the correction is too big.
Combine shallow loops with transitions between the walk and the trot (before adding in actual steps of SI/HI).
To work on your collection trot a 10 meter circle, transitioning between walk and trot, just after walking change bend to circle in the other direction (like starting a figure 8) and trot again.
Labels:
clinic,
Eddo Hoekstra,
flying changes,
half pass,
Renvers,
Shoulder In,
Travers
Eddo Hoekstra Clinic Notes...Day 1...Horse 4 and 5...
When doing walk to halt transitions stop your body and wait for the horse to lessen forward movement; if it doesn't in a few steps then use your hands to ask too.
Practice using your seat bones to ask for the walk.
After doing walk-trot-walk transitions ride while thinking of rebalancing for the walk but don't actually walk. This helps to improve the trot tremendously! You can also shift your inside hip forward and ask for the canter during one of these rebalancings.
The next horse they worked on managing the go of the horse without trying to stop it. While they did shallow loops they added in walk/trot transitions on one long side. Then the next long side they would just trot with lengthened strides. After around 3 laps they would change directions.
There will never be spring without swing!
Walk-trot transitions on a circle, ride the horse "slightly in" when walking (without steering though, steering is blocking) after this reverse directions on a new circle through the canter like previous horse.
After the horse has become good at the shallow loops (or maybe more accurately, once the rider is proficient at guiding the horse through shallow loops) then you can do shoulder in, guide back to the wall, haunches in, back to the wall, etc. Very small SI/HI, so the horse doesn't realize it's doing it.
Labels:
Eddo Hoekstra,
Half Halt,
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transitions,
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Eddo Hoekstra Clinic Notes...Day 1...Horse 3...
Next they worked on trotting a big circle, asking for a walk while coming into the center of the circle, trotting, walk and come in, and so on. Then after a few iterations of this the horse would change direction out of the circle and canter on a new circle (like beginning a figure 8).
Eddo's method for teaching shoulder in and travers was really simple and actually relaxing for the horse. He instructed the rider to ride shallow loops on the long side of the arena at the walk. Focus on directing the horse, not steering the horse, keeping it as straight as possible in the neck during the exercise and focusing on the outside ear for when you're at on the loop. Then repeat at the trot once you have the hang of it. As the horse progresses at this you can start doing a very, very small shoulder in, then haunches in. The movements are so small that the horse doesn't even realize she is doing it.
Eddo said that after 3 weeks of doing the baby SI and HI the horse would be able to do it for real. Not only do the shallow loops build toward doing SI/HI but also improve the trot as well.
The final thing I wrote down from this ride was that the more you want your horse to come back (aka collect) the more side to side (aka lateral work) you need
Labels:
clinic,
Eddo Hoekstra,
Shoulder In,
tempo,
Travers
Eddo Hoekstra Clinic Notes...Day 1...Horse 1...
I arrived just as the first horse was finishing up, but I did catch Eddo talking about looking to the right for shoulder in (when tracking right) and looking to the left for the travers, he was having the rider alternate between SI and HI and then riding forward for a few strides. I wanted to audit the clinic due to the fact that I love Walter Zettl and his style of teaching (and horsemanship) and I knew Eddo is a longtime pupil of Walter's. The exercise was very familiar from the Zettl clinic's I've been to in New Jersey and would become very familiar over the next two days.
The next horse was a darling Appaloosa mare with a sweet rider. The start of their ride was spent focusing on the horse and ensuring she was fulfilling her job as the horse in the partnership. To start Eddo had her walk on a loose rein and evaluate if the horse was going with purpose, not hurrying, but with purpose. She wasn't quite there so he had the rider walk on a loose rein and squeeze with the inside leg as the inside hind foot was leaving the ground in order to activate the walk a bit more.
When backing up the leg with the whip he said that if the horse is irritated by the whip on the hindquarters than use it on the shoulder instead. And of course, once you get a response, back off so that the horse knows it fulfilled your wishes. When the horse is more foward then you ask yourself if the horse is moving forward with purpose and relaxed. For the rider that likes to really ride every stride he said "the horse does the walking and trotting and cantering, you do not actually do those things".
One thing he really emphasized for this exercise is that a jog does not coung as a trot. When the horse breaks into a jog while trying to activate the walk it's going from a non-forward walk to a non-forward trot; it's the horse making life easier for herself. So if she breaks into a jog turn that jog into a real trot. Once the horse is moving with more purpose you need to do lots of changes of direction to test if she keeps her sense of purpose.
The more the horse goes with purpose the wasier your job gets. Once the walk was improved they began working on transitions, lots of walk/trot transitions with only a stride or two of walk before trotting again. Basically considering the idea of walking to be a possibility, not a promise.
After that they worked on Turn on the Forehand and Turn on the Haunches at the halt. Eddo said that the nice thing about working on things at the halt is that it lets you know what you're doing too much of and not enough of (for example, if you are asking for TOF and the horse steps backwards, you are using too much hand). Once a few steps were possible from the halt he had the pair start trotting foward, walking, stopping, doing a few steps of TOF, and repeat.
The final exercise was to work on connecting the horse to the seat at a standstill. This was done by at the halt, asking for flexion while squeezing with your seat until the horse chews. Then you can ask for TOF or TOH.
Friday, December 2, 2011
A video of what's going on...
After watching the video I see that the tempo is too fast, but she is such a good girl and trying. She's also trying to figure out how to interact with the new contact and way of going. The Eddo Hoekstra clinic is definitely giving me a lot of ideas for exercises to do in helping her accept the contact and relax. I'm excited to ride her again and try out what I've been watching...and that's after just one day of the clinic! I'll be posting my clinic notes once I get them typed up, probably starting tomorrow night.
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