Happy Hump Day, everybody! I don't usually write much about our day to day schooling sessions any more bc.... At a certain point, it kinda feels like I've already written everything there is to say, ya know?
It's not like back when Charlie was all shiny and new (well, ok he's still shiny) and everything we did was like some big exciting milestone...
FINALLY getting more rain! which means more rainbows, yay! |
new book! with excellent table of contents organized first by style of exercise, then by exercise author |
PLUS! Back when Charlie first got injured, an exciting new book arrived in the mail -- Margaret Rizzo McKelvy's Grid Pro Quo, a slam dunk compilation of bite-sized exercises from a whole slew of eventing's most talented riders and trainers. Each exercise is complete with two type written pages from the expert on what the exercise is good for, and how to approach and scale it for riders / horses of different training levels. Plus the normal diagrams etc.
not gonna lie -- i specifically wanted to start with something pretty simple |
Our test subjects for the ride included Charlie, obvi, but also friends Megan and Royal, and Katie and Avi -- all of whom should be at least passingly familiar for anybody whose been around much this past year. And our test exercise was chosen specifically for it's simplicity: a line of 4 ground poles, spaced 18'-21' apart, with guide rails making a "chute" at either end.
what you see ahead of us is mirrored behind us too. also, good lord our jump arena still has not recovered from the covid lockdowns... |
charlie likes growing things tho <3 |
It proved to be a really comfortable trotting distance -- each horse, regardless of training level, got nicely even trot steps between the poles without a lot of tripping or knocking rails. And yet the line was long enough to really encourage them to hold a nice posture and balance the whole way thru. In other words, poles far enough apart to not create rushing or frantic steps -- but close enough and regular enough to influence the horse's self carriage. Bingo.
unrelated pic from hangin out at the hunter pace a couple weeks ago, with OMG PUNKY!! |
We've known from his very earliest days with me that.... Charlie much prefers to learn his lessons from actual physical exercises like ground poles. Adding a ground pole to the mix changes the conversation from "emma nags charlie for more forward" to "wow there it is let's go there!"
possibly the most aggressive line of the bunch, set on a proper 3 strides and set to full N height. obvi charlie was aces |
And OMG this horse was strutting. In the hackamore, completely round, in the bridle, big bouncing steps with absolutely distinct moments of suspension... And not even approaching the exercise yet --- just motoring down the long side, trotting like the spanish stallion he thinks he is.
final post script: there's just a tiny wound left from the skin flap. otherwise we're basically all cleared up! |
We did it again, tho, then halted straight in the corner after the line, then stepped into canter -- cantered the line foot-perfect. Changed directions. Trotted the line again, (did my job while we were at it), halt, step into canter, once more through the line, and boom, complete.
Now. It is entirely possible that after this school that got Charlie so sharp and forward thinking.... Ehhhh I *might* get a bit run away with in our next jump school. Idk. We will see. But that's the pendulum swinging, right? We can be sluggish and weak, or we can be wild and gung ho.
Mayyyybe there's a middle ground in there somewhere... But, eh, maybe not LOL.
In the meantime, I hope to test out more exercises from this book. Presumably some of them will focus on control and accuracy, others on sharpness and forward reliability. Some will call for height, others for turning, etc etc etc. Is that something of interest to any of you? Or maybe you have your own go-to setups that you know get your horse tuned exactly the way you like?
There is so much value in the simple exercises. It's almost like there's a life lesson in there.....
ReplyDeleteagreed 1,000% -- even tho this exercise is super simple and something we've done zillions of times, even just tinkering with the distances gave it a whole new flavor!
Deletethat book looks awesome! I always love experimenting with 'easy/simple/straightforward' tools & strategies that end up addressing or applicable to a whole slew of things :)
ReplyDeleteagreed completely, it's so easy to overcomplicate things or think you have to do something really radical to make a difference... but nope, sometimes just a straight line of ground poles is all it takes LOL! the book is great tho, i def do plan on setting up more stuff, esp maybe some of the turning or coursework exercises...
DeleteOooo great exercise! I get so lazy about doing things like this, but it's so helpful!
ReplyDelete