Monday, August 31, 2009

Compare and Contrast

Use the following video to compare and contrast the amateur rider (me) with the open pro (Delphi's trainer Karen Brown). Notice how much more consistent and uphill Delphi becomes under Karen. Videography can be a great learning device! Nice work on Delphi's part, under both riders.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Counter Canter Serpentines, Mediums, and Travers

When schooling the second level initiate for counter canter loops, it is important to ride every stride of the canter, being sure to keep just enough (guard against too much) bend in the "true" canter direction. Do this by supporting the horse with the outside rein and leg, while maintaining jump and impulsion with the inside leg. The bend should be around the rider's inside leg; guard against too much inside rein.
Concerning the medium gaits, Delphi's medium canter is nice in that she shows a clear lengthening of stride and a clear shortening when asked to come back. Reinforce this by insisting on an immediate response to the "go" aids and when asking to come back to collected, promptly go into a lateral movement such as shoulder in keep the "come back" response crisp.
Delphi's medium trot is "wow" worthy, but she is still prone to want to canter when coming across the diagonal. I must remember to stabilize the medium trot by half halting up and keeping the hindquarters engaged and the forehand light.
We also schooled the haunches in, or travers (tra-VAIR) where Delphi's shoulders remain on the track while the haunches move to the inside. Step into your inside stirrup and use your inside leg to maintain a lively tempo and bend while using your outside leg just enough to prevent the hindquarters from going back to the rail. Delphi was able to do haunches in at trot nicely in both directions today.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

The Big Horse

Today I got to ride Karen Brown's Trakehner filly Lola for the first time. After Karen lunged and rode her, she allowed me to get on and do some walk and trot. We did some straight lines, large circles, and one ten meter turn. Lola uses her hindquarters so well, and her engine is always on forward. She was very lady-like too with a stranger aboard. What a nice horse.

Monday, August 10, 2009

The Thoughtful Warmup

When it's 100 degrees outside, the idea of "warming up" sounds laughable. During our lesson today however, I made sure to use my warm up time deliberately and intentionally. Some exercises Karen gave us follow.
At the walk:
  • Ride into the corner, then do haunches in along the wall.
  • Keeping the same angle and bend, turn the haunches in into a shoulder in along the wall.
  • Intersperse periods of collected, medium, and extended walk in with the breaks of free walk.
  • To extend the walk, allow with your hands by giving and taking with the rhythm of the horse's head and neck. To collect the walk, half halt, stop following as much with your hands, and engage the hindquarter, causing the haunch to lower and the head and neck to raise in relative elevation.
  • From haunches in, go into half pass across a diagonal, being sure that the shoulder leads the half pass.
  • Do haunches in around a ten meter circle.
At the trot:
  • Collect the trot (after the above walk work our trot was VERY nice), then allow periods of stretch down into a longer contact allowing with the inside rein first, then half halt and collect again.
  • Intersperse periods of collected, medium, and extended with periods of stretch described above.
  • Along with shoulder in, intersperse periods of straight and transitions to halt.
At the canter:
  • From collected canter, deliberately move into medium canter for four or five strides, then come back to collected canter (by riding a ten meter circle if necessary). Insist on immediate forward response into medium and immediate come back response into collected.
  • Intersperse walk to canter, medium, collected, straight lines, small circles (in random order). Always ride the canter to walk or canter to halt transition from "canter in place" collected canter.
Yes, we were warm all right when we had done all of the above. Nice work today on Delphi's part!

Friday, August 7, 2009

Boy Oh Boy

We've gone and done it. This weekend we adopted Rosco, a ruby red 12 to 14 month old Cocker spaniel boy, from Cocker Spaniel Rescue. Weighing in at under 16 pounds, he'll always be a small guy but is working on gaining a little weight.
Abandoned as a puppy to the streets of Lufkin, Texas, Rosco was picked up by the city pound. When the folks at Cocker Spaniel Rescue discovered him in May 2009, he was suffering from malnutrition and was almost completely bald from sarcoptic mange. During and after treatment, he had to be isolated from other dogs so the CSR kept him at a boarding facility in Missouri City while he was successfully cured of mange. When he was able to come back out into society, CSR brought him to their standing monthly adoption at our local Petsmart. That's where our paths crossed and he now lives with us, his forever family.
Though he officially begins obedience school (at My Dog and Me) later this month, Rosco has already learned to sit and settle, and his recall is pretty darn good. He has had absolutely ZERO house mistakes, and is quickly becoming addicted to chewing his stuffed kongs and other toys. Prissy is tolerating him well and even initiated play with him last night. He is absolutely the sweetest Cocker you could ever hope to know.
Welcome home Rosco!

"Can't we just take him back? I'm sure they miss him over at CSR!"*intelligent Border collie eyes roll skyward* "I call him 'hammers' as in 'dumber than a bag of...'"

"We can't all be GT students. I'll settle for C plus."
Super intelligent Border collie + silly goober Cocker = seems oil and water do mix, afterall.