Thursday, June 14, 2018

Cantering for days

At some point in the last year, most of my rides transitioned from walk/trot with some canter thrown in, to mostly canter with a little trot and a lot of walk breaks. I’m not entirely sure when that happened, but all of the sudden canter became something I was confident about - and of course, all the tough stuff we’re working on right now is at the canter. 

Our trot warm-up is pretty quick these days. Some walk-trot-halt-trot transitions to get him quick off my leg and a little more up in front, then some shallow leg yields to get him moving his body and stepping up. I’ve found that cantering earlier in the warmup is better for loosening his back, so we do a few 20 meter canter circles each direction. After a little walk break, we might do some shoulder in and haunches in at the trot, a couple of 8-10 meter voltes, and maybe a few trot half-passes, mostly so I can work on setting him up correctly in the corner. If I don’t set it up right, I just end up getting in T’s way, but if I’m correct with bend and balanced, he can almost do the Grand Prix trot half-pass. And then… the rest of our ride is canter work. 


Sometimes my horse only has three legs, which explains a lot.

And there is SO MUCH to work on. I am endlessly trying to polish our walk-canter transitions, because while T is great at them, I inevitably forget some body part of mine and then it takes me two strides to reorganize. I do a lot of canter-walk-canter-walk-canter transitions on the quarter line, focusing on straightness and prompt transitions (spoiler alert, this shit is hard and we look drunk, I hate mirrors because they don’t lie). We spend a lot of time trying to improve the jump and quality of the canter, doing things like renvers, leg yield, spiral in and out, to help his strength and ability to sit. 

And there is definitely more sit!

Then there’s stuff like canter squares, where I turn his shoulders for two strides in each corner. When I get it right, I can really feel him balance back and his shoulders get super light and it's so easy for him... and when I don't, I'm basically hauling him around the turn.

Our problems have a lot to do with me still not actually keeping my butt in the saddle for all three beats of the canter, but I'm getting better.

We work on cantering on the spot (ish, very ish), lots of forward-and-back… there are an endless number of exercises to use. I find it mentally challenging to process what’s happing under me and choosing the right exercise to improve it when I’m on my own – in lessons I can be more of a puppet and rely on my trainer to help me figure it out. 

Like here I have lost his shoulders to the outside and I'm bending him too much with the inside rein. I need a more solid outside rein and a titch of outside thigh to ask his shoulders to stand up under his body. 

And of course, working on the changes. That’s another post in of itself, because we’re both working on the change and working on NOT changing… which seems to be just as challenging! But we’re making progress, and for a sixteen year old horse that just started learning changes in January, it's pretty awesome.

Not a change, but you can see that his inside hind is on the ground and the outside front is still in motion... a year ago he was landing outside front first. The canter CAN be improved, but it takes time! 

Oddly enough, I don’t spend a lot of time working on medium or extended gaits any more. When I do, it’s more of a check to make sure he remembers how to do them. It seems that because we’ve been working so much on carrying and pushing power, when I actually ask for a medium gait, he’s up in his shoulders and absolutely pushing me out of the saddle from behind. I just have to keep my leg on, help him with balance if he needs it, and otherwise stay out of his way (hahahaohmygodthisissohard). It is incredibly cool to see how much his medium gaits have improved - not because we've been explicitly working on medium gaits, but because he’s gotten so much stronger.


How much of your ride do you spend at each gait?

16 comments:

  1. it's just come to my attention that my horse needs to spend more time cantering. not that we didn't canter before, obvi (and actually my horse's warm up is almost entirely walk and canter, with very little trot), but. ya know. needs *moar* apparently.

    i like to do a lot of counter canter and some leg yielding in canter, and lots (and lots and lots) of transitions, but i think he just needs to spend more time in the gait overall. possibly with more focus of transitions within canter too, specifically getting more jump off my leg...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Transitions within the canter are a beast. The collecting to medium is ok once you figure out that you have to keep your shoulders and his UP (ask me how I know), but man, learning how to collect without touching the reins is hard AF. Super cool once you get the feeling but man... for me not pulling is a hard habit to break!

      Delete
  2. Cantering a lot right now. We are working on developing that gait and after spending four years developing the trot, I am hoping it won't take that long. We spend probably 80% of our lessons at the canter.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Developing gaits takes a long, long time, doesn't it? But it sure pays off - you and Ashke looked GREAT in your latest videos!

      Delete
  3. Fun! I've been stepping up the canter work for Emi recently as it's a weak spot for us. She runs out of gas before I get everything done but that's okay, it's a work in progress. I've also recently started spending more time at the walk doing exercises like leg yields and renver.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ya I used to run out of gas in the canter and then I figured out we needed to canter earlier in the ride. That's how I learned that he warms up better with an earlier canter! And all that walk work may be a bit boring but it really helps so much, because they are bendy and flexy and off your leg and seat before you move up a gait where everything happens 10x faster. I love a good walk warm up, it makes the rest of the ride ever so much easier!

      Delete
  4. Definitely more sit!

    We trot and canter the most. I'm trying to unlock the variability in Grif's trot more as he would rather break to canter for a lot of things. Though we are cantering a fair big in an attempt to teach changes.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Forward-and-back within the gait helped T a lot to figure it out, and it also helped with strength to actually carry himself better in the forward. Super exciting about teaching changes though, I can't wait to hear more about how it's going for you!

      Delete
  5. I need to be better about cantering more in my flat rides. That's really the gait I need the most work on!

    ReplyDelete
  6. So awesome!! I don't work on the extended gaits anymore much either. Maybe a touch forward and back, but rarely a whole diagonal. You are right, once they learn to sit - the extensions are just there for you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I KNOW, and I really wish someone had told me that years ago. I would have spent a lot less time trying to gun my horse across the diagonal and more time working on exercised to help them sit more. Facepalm.

      Delete
  7. I've been cantering a lot more since you told me to! It works!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's funny how you get better at things you practice doing... :D

      Delete
  8. When we were riding a lot (years ago) cantering more helped Harley learn to slow down and no doubt develop the strength to do so. He started offering changes. I worked with him sans trainer so it was completely an experiment. I had to be so careful about my position or he would change when I didn't want it. It took me a long time to ride the canter well enough so that he stayed on the lead I wanted. It would have been cool to work with a trainer and actually develop a reliable change. I admire your work with Taran and your dedication. Love reading about the process too.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The changes are definitely a work in progress. At least in T's case, if he thinks we might be changing and I'm not PERFECTLY CLEAR that we're not, he will offer it up R-L. I'm having to learn to ride the canter leads much, much more clearly, which is really hard!

      Delete