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Not like poles. Poles are pretty freaking linear. |
Horse training is not a linear process.
Horse training is not a linear process.
Horse training is not a linear process.
Horse training is not a linear process.
Horse training is not a linear process.
I think I need that tattooed on something I look at on a regular basis. Not my forehead, because who sees that anyways?
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Look at us floating through trot poles |
Sigh. I wrote up this bubbly happy training post about how Courage is going really well on the flat and I can feel progress every ride and we can trot and canter through lines of poles and jump single fences and all is well.
And then I set up a perfectly logical trot in grid. 4 poles, 9' to a crossrail, 18' to a little vertical, 9' to a placing poles. Or thereabouts.
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The best at launching over placing poles. |
And yeah, epic fail. In case you doubted his scope, I can assure you that my little man is capable of clearing both an 18" vertical and the placing pole set after it in a single bound. Multiple times in a row.
Since I wasn't doubting his scope at all (let's face it people, the horse hasn't even had to try yet), I was not thrilled. Especially since I couldn't really make it better. We knocked the vertical down to poles and got the back side slightly more combobulated, but it was never what you'd call good and his brain was perilously close to just fleeing the scene altogether.
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No, I don't know why this placing pole is ok. |
So we finished up with something else and called it a day.
I've pretty well been in a funk since then, despite two days off and a pretty kickass ride (with no poles) on Monday.
Don't misunderstand me here--I'm not mad at Courage or blaming him or even upset with our program (such as it is). I know it's green horse stuff. I know we'll work through it (or not. And then just never do grids, which I guess isn't the end of the world either. It's not like we're aiming to be competitive grid jumpers).
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I have wanted these so so long. Finally mine, argyle polos. |
I know all that. I'm just frustrated right now.
I tried making myself feel better by playing with racehorses, but I just got hit in the face so hard that I couldn't see straight.
So then I thought I'd try retail therapy.
That helped a little.
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Making the bitching wait time worth it |
Then this happened... I think I feel a lot better now.
So I don't know where I'm at. My inner traditionalist screams that it is impossible to have a jumper who can't do grids, which are the very foundation all of decent jumper training.
My modernist side reminds me that we must tailor the training to the horse, not the horse to the training.
My rational brain keeps chanting "NOT A LINEAR PROCESS" and whatever's left is like "STFU I GOT A DAMN COOKIE MONSTER BONNET."