I wouldn’t normally schedule a lesson right after a horse show… but keeping the regular routine with dressage trainer C has been so valuable, not least bc it’s one less thing for me to hustle up.
Plus, I honestly believe that Doozy thrives in consistent regular practice — that horses don’t really think about “time off” in quite the same way as us. Realistically, a one day BN horse trial is definitely a larger overall exertion than our typical day to day work, but it doesn’t exactly require “recovery” beyond maybe a day off or light hack, etc.
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| the sweetest biscuit, a true sport about getting literally just 10min of turnout before getting on the trailer |
Alas, tho, no footage, so you’re just going to have to take my word for it. And obvi, without any related compelling media, it’s hard to really write all that much about it either, so I’ll just try to capture the high level details.
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| “anything for carrots!” |
She wanted us spiraling in super slowly, just only coming inside of our last track with each rotation (something that was easy to measure bc per usual we were laying down the first hoofprints of the day in that fancy footing!). Then, after arriving at maybe a 15 or 12m circle, slowly going back out again. Rinse repeat, about 3 times of a full in-and-out.
The whole idea was not just to establish that inside bend — but actually to help Doozy learn to trust that posture. Help her learn to soften into it and relax.
And a big part was focusing on my own posture too, naturally. Trainer C wanted my inside elbow to be really pinned to my body, and really focusing on staying out of her way by keeping my inside leg long and heavy, and not collapsing in my inside core. Normal stuff for us, but obvi it’s always better with realtime in-the-moment instruction!
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| grateful for ol’ faithful!! |
In particular, trainer C reminded me to make it really obvious with my releases and softening in the contact when Doozy got it right. Which aligns nicely with something Dan mentioned while warming us up at Loch Moy: That the whole point of working to get her stable on the aids is to be able to let go, and have her stay. In other words: self carriage.
Which, notably, is something we REALLY need to develop in the jumping in particular. I need to be able to get around cross country without hanging onto the e-brake the whole time, know what I mean? But baby steps, obvi.
It was funny bc after spiraling the trot circle back out to 20m after about the 3rd time, wherein Doozy felt like she was really understanding the pattern and posture, trainer C told us to canter. And Doozy was actually caught a bit surprised — actually a bit offended! Like she felt like she had understood the rules but then we changed them on her.
It was an interesting feeling, and really highlights that so much of her tension comes from a place of insecurity.
In any case, it was nbd, we just reestablished the trot then asked again, and then worked for the spiral feeling in canter too. We repeated this in both directions, then took the trot large again to the full ring. Then repeating the feeling of the spiral at the opposite end of the ring — not the full exercise, just the feeling of it, before stepping into canter again, to now come down the quarter lines in canter, leg yielding to the wall. Then 15m circle, trot, change directions, rinse repeat.
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| all tuckered out, ready to go home again! |
And holy moly, Doozy felt incredible. So on the aids, so steady in her tempo, uphill, round, all the things. Basically like Empress of the Universe, Knower of Everything lol. THAT is the horse I want to have at horse shows!
But ya know. This dressage barn has always been a slightly magical place, with mystical good juju that brings out the best in horses.
For me, the biggest takeaways are obviously the exercises and posture notes (for both horse and rider), but also basically the reaffirmation of always having a proactive approach to our rides. For example, was it the spiral itself that got Doozy feeling so engaged on the aids, or merely me just being super intentional about riding each footprint?
Who knows, it honestly doesn’t really matter either. Except that it’s nice when everything really boils down to the same fundamentals again and again lol…























































