told ya. banging. |
She may have ended up regretting that choice.
Saturday was our first ride. Our outfit was completely banging, which I was proud of. The clinician was less interested in that and more interested in the fact that while I've gotten Courage to give up the base of his neck some, his solution was to then shorten his stride and release his neck while still holding his back tight.
ASS |
Courage learns by slowing down and taking the pressure off, not jamming forward and hoping he figures things out along the way.
The ride focused on teaching Courage to stretch all the way down to the ground, first at the halt, then at the walk. Once he figured out what I wanted, I had to ask him to go slightly more forward.
best day 1 shot |
At the end of the lesson, we incorporated it into the trot a little, but it was hard work for Courage, both mentally and physically.
nailed it. |
Because I am poor/a tightwad/motivated (you pick), I didn't want to take the same lesson twice. I warmed Courage up on Sunday using the principles from the lesson Saturday and had it down. Our clinician was impressed.
That lasted like .02 seconds and then we were back to work. Since Courage understood the concepts, it was time to start applying them.
but so fancy |
We were going right. I wanted to say "LULZ WOMAN U CRAY CRAY", but I hate people who don't believe in themselves and talk back to the instructor.
So I did what she asked--I kept Courage active and loose. I sat up like a dressage rider instead of perching like a happy jump rider. I brought Courage back every time he braced.
ERMEGERD RIGHT LEAD CANTER |
HOT DAMN LADIES MY HORSE CAN CANTER RIGHT
This was where I really loved the clinician--we attempted to canter a couple of times and each time Courage braced and tried to run.
So the clinician had me bring him back to walk and do the same thing in w/t transitions a few times, then ask for the canter once he was comfortable.
It made SO MUCH SENSE to a Courage brain.
i love his mane in this one |
In fact, she said that when she comes back in a month or two, she thinks I'll be able to have him correctly and consistently on the bit at all three gaits.
:-D Nothing like a little confidence.
Love this! And the clinician sounds awesome :)
ReplyDeleteWohoo! Great clinic and money well spent. I especially love the right canter picture (more than your previous left ones btw ;))
ReplyDeleteWow. So much fancy. The pictures are stunning. Go Aimee and Courage!!!
ReplyDelete"Dressage" and "fun" in the same sentence??? Be still my jumper heart! :P
ReplyDeleteYou guys are gorg btw.
Love the right lead photo!!
ReplyDeleteHELL YES!
ReplyDeleteLooking so good!
ReplyDeleteI am so happy for you! And this was such a good post for me to read because this is exactly what I have been struggling with with Murray! He gives up the base of his neck but his stride gets TEENSY and he's clearly not using his back AT ALL. So I am extremely happy that I will get to incorporate these exercises into my ride some more and keep working on getting a huge, bodybuilder neck that is floppy and gorgeous.
ReplyDeleteSounds like it a was a productive two days for you, even if a lesson at the walk is never anyone's favorite.
ReplyDeleteI just love everything about all the pictures and words in this post!!
ReplyDeleteYour clothes.
His clothes (esp combo wraps <3)
His hair
His body
His movement
Your position
LOVE LOVE LOVE
Lovely progress!
ReplyDeleteThis makes me so happy! You guys look good! (Attire and riding-wise!)
ReplyDeleteawesome - nice work!
ReplyDeleteYay!! Sounds like a fabulous clinic with golden nuggets of wisdom you'll be using going forward =)
ReplyDeleteI REGRET NOTHING. Yah hear? Because look! Pictures! And I learned stuff too!
ReplyDeleteI love how Courage's mane is all flippy-uppy in the pictures.
ReplyDeleteOne of the best feelings of dressage is when the horse gives his back and really moves rounded and forward. I learned how to do it at the walk as well. Great start. Now, wait until he's solid at it and you are going to find wonderful rewards when he jumps again. So exciting!
ReplyDeleteLove this!! you both look amazing, and I'm always jealous of the photos. You and Courage really, really, really make me want to get into dressage with my western pony.
ReplyDeleteWoohoo! Way to go Team Courage!!
ReplyDeleteSo much awesomeness happening with you guys!
ReplyDeleteSo excited for you! Sounds like a great clinic :)
ReplyDeleteWhat a great and productive clinic! All of your hard work this winter is really paying dividends now :D
ReplyDeleteNothing makes me happier than a good left lead canter (Tucker's weaker side) so I KNOW that awesome feeling like you've just done the impossible when you get a good canter on their hard side. You guys rock! So happy you have photo evidence, he looks absolutely lovely.
ReplyDeleteAhh yesss right lead canter ftw! You guys look great (dressage-wise and outfit-wise).
ReplyDeleteSuch fancy!
ReplyDeleteWhoohoo! So fancy!
ReplyDeleteLove a good clinic, and SUPER love having 2 very different lessons back to back.
ReplyDeleteSweeeet photos and post!!
ReplyDeleteBoo Ya baby - sounds like an epically awesome way to spend the weekend perfecting your dancing Diva skills!
ReplyDeletePs: not to be a pain in the butt but have you done a teach me Tuesday on the topic of spurs, broken down like your awesome stirrup iron approach...
Yeaaaaa dressij!!
ReplyDeleteCourage says that those warmbloods ain't got nothin' on him. He looks great!
ReplyDeleteYahoo papa!!
ReplyDeleteAll of this just resonated so much. Guinness does the same thing (gives neck, keeps back, gets short) He also learns very similarly to Courage. You have to really slow everything down and show him clearly what you want. Then slowly add that in at faster paces. Pushing for "forward" just makes him more tense and tight. It's almost never the answer, despite every dressage person ever spouting it as the end-all of solutions. ;)
ReplyDeleteLove those learning moments! Go you and Courage, he looks lovely!
ReplyDelete