But then just a few days later I was off again, this time to Minnesota for my firm's biannual team meetings. It was a short trip, but busy. And combined with the time away in KY, it was enough to really sorta throw us off our rhythm around here lol.
gosh i just love this handsome goofy face haha, esp with that dapper shiny new patent noseband! |
And in a very real way, it was nice to not feel like I had any actual pressure about getting back in the groove ASAP after the trips. Charlie enjoyed his time off, and we've been making up for the lost time in a fairly low-key manner. Lots of light dressage rides and hacks etc.
oh but the many faces of charlie!! |
In the meantime, I've found it most useful for my dressage schools. I always like to walk Charlie for at least ~10min as part of our warm up, generally on a loose rein. That's easy enough to do with a normal wrist watch tho, obvi. But as the ride goes on, it's interesting and useful to see how much time I spend in each "session" of our work, if that makes sense.
the flash is an improvement tho, gives a little more balance to that ridiculously long snoot |
Overall, I end up spending somewhere between 10-14min in trot and 3-7min in canter in any given ride. Then probably 15-25min in walk. I would give you screenshots from the app to reflect this information, except the graphics are basically useless so.... uh, Sorry?? haha.
It's interesting to me, tho, bc the time spent in actual "trot / canter" work is usually only half (or less) of my total ride time. Information is power, tho, so now that I've got a reasonably good gauge on average time cycles, I've been able to plan our cycles in the rides more effectively.
tho the snackamore might be both our all-time favorite bridle HA |
So maybe I spent the first part of the ride chasing after him to get him going, but then the end of the ride I'm hauling on him to slow the F down. It's.... not a great balance lol. But it's also something I *must* figure out, esp in a competition setting. I need to optimize the warm up such that Charlie's entering the ring right at that perfect point where he's loose and swinging in his back, tracking up and moving forward, but not flattening into a freight train.
The app is helping a lot with that, esp in terms of helping me improve his condition so he doesn't get tired so easily. Thank god for #thoroughbred tho bc that's one of the easiest problems to fix haha! Even just getting him out for easy going 2.5-3mi walking hacks helps in a huge way there.
bc sometimes nothing beats a leisurely stroll through the woods! |
And actually, I realized it was basically exactly a year ago where Charlie felt sorta similarly lethargic and slug-like, and I ended up backing off of him wayyyy too much. Resulting in catastrophe when we didn't have enough oomph and forward in competition.
So... Idk. Maybe it's just the effects of the spring grass and warming weather? Regardless, after Charlie was kinda doggin me at Shawan, (as evidenced by all his ridiculously lazy canter transitions that I edited out of the video...), I got a bit more serious about the flat work in our normal rides.
Turns out, actually, that when I insist on getting the proper amount of forward right off the bat, the horse will actually do it. And, on top of that, he'll do all the other things even better the first time I ask. So that I don't need to keep drilling, keep having that fight and drawing out the whole ride to the point where he tires and I lose him. Lol.
Now if only that lesson would stay learned, Emma.
It's also useful to approach some of the problems in our jumping from the dressage ring too. Basically my entire impression of our current work is that Charlie needs to sharpen up, and I need to raise my expectations a bit. And we probably need like 8,000 more dressage lessons in addition to all the xc lessons I'm jonesing for. Ya know, details.
But really tho.... The jumping is where the rubber meets the proverbial road, right? It doesn't really matter if I can compel Charlie into a big beautiful forward canter in the dressage ring if I'm still gonna freeze up when faced with a big jump lol. Or if I can execute the most flowing 10m half turns but then end up pulling around a scary bending line instead of kicking through it.
In the video above, our jump into the training water (1:12) was fine enough with it as a single jump. But it's not exactly convincing enough to say whether I'd have been able to make out over that full size T ramp on the other side.
Whereas in the Novice water combination (1:39) where the out jump was just a small log, I was much more accurate and committed in my riding. So that's pretty clearly a *me* thing too, right?
(**tho in my defense, the T water was wayyyyy deeper lol)
It's also kinda nice that it really does seem to be just one unifying thread showing up in all my rides, whether on the flat or over fences. Just needs moar forward. Which, in its simplest form, is a function of me just needing someone to sit there and yell at me until I finally put my leg on the horse haha.
That's always the answer anyway, lol. Needs more leg!!
Ooof, one of the hardest things I've had to learn is that T prefers to do a teeny bit of trot after a nice walk warmup with a lot of laterals, halts, rein-backs, etc, and then prefers almost immediately to canter. After he's had a nice canter both ways, THEN he is much happier to come back to a sproingy, engaged trot. Otherwise I feel like I have to beat him into a good, uphill trot. Like, just canter already, the trot will sort itself out! I hope you find a warmup that works for you and Charlie... it can be a challenge!
ReplyDeletethanks - challenge is definitely the right word for it. esp bc it seems like the "optimal warm up" is constantly shifting and evolving. like, sometimes the immediate canter is perfect for charlie. except for when it isn't haha. but that sproingy engaged trot haha... ain't that just like the holiest of grails??
DeleteWhen I got the equisense I was expecting my rides to be all over the place but holy crap am I consistent. I do the exact same amount of walk, trot, and canter almost down to the minute. My warm up takes the same amount of time. It's creepy how consistent I am.
ReplyDeleteI'm hoping soon I can use it to check myself that I am upping the amount of canter. I think itll help take the edge off too :P
lol agreed completely on that consistency tho. i was pretty shocked too but i guess when we've sorta relied on our own internal clocks and feel for so long, we fall into a routine that doesn't really budge. i like it! but like you, i also like being able to put quantifiable numbers to that "feel" too so that i can make some incremental adjustments. more canter is on my agenda too, esp when it comes to laterals at the canter and counter canter, since that's where i feel like i have the best shot at getting charlie's hind end stronger and more engaged
DeleteThe warm up is so hard for me to figure out. With Gem is was all about relaxation. If I trotted or cantered too soon, it was all she wanted to do and was game over. With H'Appy it is more about convincing him that a) yes, he does have to work and b) he won't die if he moves just a bit more. He does like to canter pretty early on but Fat Boy can't be let to go too much or he then follows Charlie in the whole deflating thing. Tricky, tricky.
ReplyDeleteman, i still feel like there are so many similarities between Gem and Izzy haha. anything after canter could be a bit unpredictable with Izzy too lol. and, now that you mention it, maybe H'Appy and Charlie are kinda similar too. lots and lots of convincing and coercing going on sometimes lol...
DeleteMany years ago a farrier said something to the effect it was better to warm up in a canter because at a canter a horse has a shorter posterior stride. Which I think means that at a canter they don't have to take as big steps behind (track up as it were) and it would allow them to warm up the hind end before asking for the bigger steps.
ReplyDeleteWhich kind of makes the better trot after canter thing make sense.
That said, I am terrible about doing a bunch of trot work and ending on canter work. I know I should mix it up more.
Yea that makes a lot of sense. I also feel like the canter can open up a stiff back better than anything else (except maybe a low jump or two). Esp with how they oscillate their necks in the gait vs the trot, it really just gets the whole machine greased up and moving lol. But yea I also feel ya on not always mixing it up like I should. Sometimes I kinda just stick to my routine lol
DeleteMan each horse is so different when it comes to warm-up, Carlos loved a good gallop or canter before starting work to loosen himself up (but he was also a major energizer bunny). Ramone liked to be long low and strung out but could come up and get energized after that. With Dante it seems like how we do the warm up is how he'll be the whole ride - let him be long and low, he won't want to come up, demand energy in the beginning get energy all the way through to the end.
ReplyDeleteAt least between your blog and the app you have some great data points to work off of. Also poor Charles in that grazing muzzle lol
gotta love those data points tho, right??? sometimes i think i learn more from reflecting after the fact than when i'm actually in the moment haha. it's so interesting to me how different each horse can be. i think ultimately of the three examples you shared, charlie might be the most like Dante. which means it's up to me to ask for what i want up front, rather than kinda dilly dallying around and then being surprised when charlie responds in kind haha.
Deletealso, yea i felt kinda bad about the muzzle, but he actually wore it just fine! plus it's better than him trying to grow another third trimester grass baby.... lol