| um yeah. Also he has great hair. |
Anyways. It's been a doozie of a week/weekend and I am not exactly in fighting shape here, so when S showed up to teach us on Saturday I sort of whimpered and whined and then she rode C-rage instead of me.
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| We meet again upside down neck |
S honed in on our problems right away. She also said Courage is a nice horse to sit on. I'm a sucker for compliments, so I'll take it.
Anyways.
The red circle on the picture is where Courage holds all his tension. He has a short neck and the moment he un-relaxes, that spot gets tense and blocks up all his energy.
| Cool fall pic to make up for no lesson pics |
It happens in the walk and trot some, but a lot in the canter. Because S was in the saddle, I had her work on it and talk me through what I needed to do to take the next step forward.
The essence of it is that we need to do 3 things:
1) LOTS OF CANTER. He can't improve a gait he isn't working in.
2) Longer neck. Courage has a short neck, but that's not the problem. He needs to carry it a little lower and longer especially in the canter and build the muscles that allow him to be strong in that frame.
| ogilvy doesn't match pad. it hurts me. |
Oof. After watching S work Courage for a while (a long while), I hopped on and got a feel for what she was doing. My favorite thing she said was when we were talking about teaching a skill to a horse. She pointed out that at first we reward the horse for a correct response by walking and releasing pressure, but "horses don't get motor memory by not doing something". (It's a double negative, but the point stands.)
Which is to say, it's time to canter and canter and canter and build strength, stamina, and correct muscle memory.
| He was REALLY in to selfies. Like more than me. |
So here's to a new era of rolling forward in the canter with effective legs (me) and improved straightness (Courage).
And all the things.
I know I sound a little more incoherent than usual. It's probably because I'm so excited for our longtime friend and photographer Ellie buying a mare from my barn and starting her own blog! Go CHECK THEM OUT!!

I'm digging the starry butt
ReplyDeleteChrome is getting an upside down neck too so I can empathize with you. :/ I'm glad the lesson was productive for you to watch. You'll get it back in no time. Also yes he is very sexy!!
ReplyDeleteGood lesson!
ReplyDeleteSounds like a productive lesson. Good luck keeping it up! :)
ReplyDeletethe neck can be such a useful tool in gauging bend and relaxation!
ReplyDeletesounds like lots of good stuff to work on! and very nice that your trainer likes him so much :)
ReplyDeleteCanter, canter, canter! I'm there with ya!
ReplyDeleteso so smex. Love the OTTB love. and clip job.
ReplyDeleteI have a Haffie with a matchink upside-down neck...
ReplyDeleteLoki had a similar issue even though he does not have a short neck. All last winter we worked on just cantering in the indoor and it really, really helped.
ReplyDeleteYay for trainer rides, compliments & homework. All sounds positive and achievable, keep up the fab work! ☺
ReplyDeleteI am.so glad you said E was starting a blog, I was hoping this would be the case - LOVE her photos!!!!
"He can't improve a gait he isn't working in"
ReplyDeleteSo true. I guess I should canter more too...
!
ReplyDeleteCanter, the problem and the solution. ugh. :P