Saturday, April 24, 2010

When "bad" rides turn "good"

It's interesting what we categorize as a "good" ride versus a "bad" ride sometimes... Yesterday I got on Radar and was not happy. At all. He was so, so stiff and completely unable to bend to the left. I was really not looking forward to the way I the ride was going to go. But, believe it or not, we really went back to the basics (I WILL NOT hold up your head for you! GO forward!) and we had a really good ride, doing trot to canter transitions, basically no tight circles or turns or anything like that, and it was really fun. I think Radar felt better, too, getting ridden in a way that will help him recover from whatever happened after the trail ride.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Equitation!

I don't think I've done cone-weaving in, oh, about 10 years! But yesterday we worked on position and turning via a simple cone-weaving exercise. Basically I worked on the concept that legs/hip/upper body are in fact separate entities and can be used separately for the most responsiveness. Ultimately, the most effective way to do these slight turns was to focus on both moving my hips and legs while keeping my upper body straight. Weirdly enough, Radar is super-responsive to these small changes in my seat. The fact that Radar, of all horses, responds to this kind of ride is really interesting for me and makes me excited about the direction my riding is going now. Radar can be so dull and stiff that his responsiveness to the seat is kind of amazing.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Walk work & shoulder-ins

Today we tried to keep it simple (both the pony and I were tired!), focusing on walk work with the new leg position I've been working on (more contact through my thighs without gripping, my heels a tad bit "higher" to enable this contact). Radar was very responsive to this and we got some rather forward walk. Then we did some shoulder-ins, and once again he was really, really responsive to my leg. I tried not to think at all about his head or neck, and think about it all coming from the hind end. This worked really, really well and I avoided bracing or overflexing him while still getting a good shoulder-in. Did a bit of sitting trot; it went really well, too. Didn't get to do any canter work like on Tuesday, but it was a good lesson nevertheless.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Changing the posting trot & a bit of canter

Worked a lot on more posting than sitting, focusing on posting from my thighs (without pinching!) so that I avoid gripping too much with my lower leg and popping myself out of the saddle at the canter. This definitely helped the canter & I got a few really good (but short!) canters.