Calming energy
Our energy has an effect. How aware are you of your thoughts as you go to see your horse?
Swinging back
How can we tell when the horse is lifting their backs and using their body in the best way possible? Here are some tips!
Tips to see if your horse is using their back #riding #horseriding #horsemanship #horses
Back Lift before riding
Getting the horse to lift their back is a great way to create awareness in the horse of how they are carrying themselves. When they start to hold themselves better they will begin to develop proper muscling throughout their entire body.
Focus on the back
I would like to help more riders understand how much the back and thoracic sling* are the keys to a successful ride. When they lift their back they can stretch their neck forward and down. This also allows them to begin to step underneath themselves and really use their hindquarters. Just like our hip and seat position are the key to great riding the horses back is the key to a smoother ride and a horse that can use their body in the best way possible. I apologize in advance for some of the video. I am learning. I will get better 😃. -edit. I did a back lift during the part of not great videoing. I will try to get a better video next time in the beginning of our session when his back is a little more dropped so you can really see how much them lifting changes how their back looks. Here he is already lifted as we are towards the end of our session.
So very true!!! (Short video of me working with a horse that had developed anxiety at the mounting block)
Things your riding instructor wants you to know:
1. This sport is hard. You don't get to bypass the hard…..every good rider has gone through it. You make progress, then you don't, and then you make progress again. Your riding instructor can coach you through it, but they cannot make it easy.
2. You're going to ride horses you don't want to ride. If you're teachable, you will learn from every horse you ride. Each horse in the barn can teach you if you let them. IF YOU LET THEM. Which leads me to…
3. You MUST be teachable to succeed in this sport. You must be teachable to succeed at anything, but that is another conversation. Being teachable often means going back to basics time and time and time again. If you find basics boring, then your not looking at them as an opportunity to learn. Which brings me to…..
4. This sport is a COMMITMENT. Read that, then read it again. Every sport is a commitment, but in this sport your teammate weighs 1200 lbs and speaks a different language. Good riders don't get good by riding every once in awhile….they improve because they make riding a priority and give themsevles opportunity to practice.
5. EVERY RIDE IS AN OPPORTUNITY. Even the walk ones. Even the hard ones. Every. Single. Ride. Remember when you just wished someone would lead you around on a horse? Find the happiness in just being able to RIDE. If you make every ride about what your AREN'T doing, you take the fun out of the experience for yourself, your horse, and your instructor. Just enjoy the process. Which brings me to...
6. Riding should be fun. It is work. and work isn't always fun.....but if you (or your rider) are consistently choosing other activities or find yourself not looking forward to lessons, it's time to take a break. The horses already know you don't want to be here, and you set yourself up for failure if you are already dreading the le
Sky and Sasha opted to be hosed down on this hot day, of course they followed this with a dust bath. Pete went with playing in the nice cold water in his water tub :)😆
Emma and Butterscotch
Springtime lessons :)