At home, we usually take a short trail ride to the field where we do most of our work, so we have a 10+ minute walk warm-up. Then I do some trot and canter on a long rein, take a bit of a breather, and then consider us ready to get down to business.
Alfredo's suggestion was much different. Instead of doing long stretches at any one gait, he had us do perhaps a circle or a half circle of one thing, then a circle of walk, then pick the reins back up, do something else, walk, etc. Essentially it was a lot of very sort bits of bending and flexing, working lower and then asking for a few steps of collection, working lower, back to walk - just lots of gentle transitions, gentle flexing, and gentle laterals. I posted the trot the whole time to let his back warm up (I normally do a lot of posting so that wasn't new).
Longer rein at the beginning of the ride
Asking for him to come a bit more together
As the session went on, we asked for more sustained stretches of collection, more angle in the laterals, more bend, and a faster response off the leg. Again, Alfredo's method is very short stretches of good work, followed immediately by a walk/reward break when
Flexion left with a bit more collection
Really asking that hind leg to come through
The trot near the end of the ride
I can certainly see the benefits of shorter chunks of work, especially with an older horse, but I do worry a little about building more fitness and also the horse expecting that he only has to work for short periods of time (ahem).
We did have one fantastically excellent spook when a pitchfork that was leaning against the side of the arena slid down the wall and onto the ground...
Thank goodness for saddles with ginormous thigh blocks!
Meh
Better
THAT's what you want to come out of the gate with!
Glad you have a clinician you work so well with. :-) Taran is almost unrecognizable.
ReplyDeleteHe's really changed so much in just a year!
DeleteYou guys have totally transformed as a pair this year! Looking great, and I love his "RUN AWAYYYY!!" spook from the pitchfork. Too funny!
ReplyDeleteA more athletic horse makes for more athletic spooks. This is not a good thing.
DeleteThat spook sequence is priceless. You look great through it though!
ReplyDeleteI didn't die, so that's good.
DeleteAhhhhh I know I told you before but... Taran looks so good!!!! He should be taking our show spot in a month since Penn is not looking that good!
ReplyDeleteHaha we only have moments of awesome but we can't sustain it. An entire test is just beyond us right now!
Deletewow he looks so different now! you are doing things right, I guess!
ReplyDeleteSomething seems to be working for us, for sure!
DeleteI love learning more about the strategies behind test riding and scores and whatnot. Alfredo's tidbit about scores relative to how the movement starts and ends is really insightful!
ReplyDeleteIt really is, I'd never thought of it that way before, but it makes sense and echos my own experiences scribing.
DeleteDayummm, Taran! You guys are looking so good! Also that lateral strength is really making those spooks a solid 10 in my book. ;)
ReplyDeleteThat spook was definitely a 10. I wonder if he maybe could be a cutting horse with that fabulous spin?
DeleteGreat spook photos, & food for thought re: warm-up
ReplyDeleteDefinitely a different warm-up.
DeleteI'm so impressed you stayed in the middle for that spook! Can I just say that even your "meh" looks great compared to where you guys started? You guys are looking so fabulous. Alfredo's thoughts on warm up do make a bit of sense, although I'm like you and more likely to do a few longer sets. I played with shorter sets of stuff with more walking in between this weekend though, and it did seem to make a difference. My guess is that, like with everything horses, there's a balance in there.
ReplyDeleteYeah I think for us some shorter work with some longer sets is ok. We'll find a better balance, but it's an interesting perspective!
DeleteI Love the spook series of shots. Great seat!
ReplyDeleteAthletic horse is more athletic. Boo.
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