09/21/2024
There are so many benefits to be found in cantering, for both horse and rider.
If your horse is elderly or may fall, these can be taught a few steps at a time on the lunge, or not at all. If you, yourself, are worried, almost everything be built upon the lunge but please, first consider this.
The leaping action up to the bridle, the coiling of the loin, the transfer of the weight and power to the hind end, the replication of the gathering ‘jump’ stride that really engages the horse, the building of fitness for both of you, the loosening of the hips and lower back for the rider, the release of pent-up stress and emotion, the sheer JOY of this loveliest of gaits…
These should all be enough to convince us. Still, I have learned that cantering (or loping) can be a hard sell, especially as we, ourselves, age.
As Lyric works her way along this journey, I do understand your reticence! The pony’s habit of squirting ahead and fly-bucking before she settles in, is disconcerting.
We see so many breeds, particularly those with generations of carriage driving use deep within their DNA, who are just more at home at the trot. They are not at all convinced by our wish to do all this ‘Hi-Ho Silver’ stuff.
I tend to not push them, trusting that the time and balance to canter calmly always comes.
It is true, however, that these harness types of horses and ponies can benefit from the above-named advantages of cantering, most of all.
Here, Lyric and I are still resolutely working our way through the trot, adding some rein back and basic turns on the forehand, to better understand the meaning of my leg.
I’ll often put a stoic-but-still-green horse or pony—a heavier 'cobby' type—in a little mullen-mouth pelham with a wide leather curb strap, just to see if the understanding and feeling of lightness comes more easily with a bitting change. So many times, it does—like a light bulb, really—but Lyric was neither enlightened, nor inconvenienced, yesterday.
She does, however, grow more confidently forward with every ride… and this is a good thing. In the lower right photo, there is some discord, as I begin to wean her off the ‘open’ inside rein. More and more, I will be guiding her to go exactly where I plan to track—that is, less like a colt—with fewer ‘dropped’ shoulders and cornering shortcuts.
Lyric clearly asks, “What the heck?!”
Photos: Mike McLean.