Is It My Fault - Or My Horse's?
By Faith Meredith
Director of Riding, Meredith Manor International Equestrian
Centre
Waverly, WV - Every rider has experienced the situation
where they ask their horse for a particular shape or movement and
either nothing happens or something other than what they wanted
happens. You apply the aids for a left lead canter and the horse
just keeps walking along as though nothing changed at all. Or you
apply those aids and the horse wrings its tail and moves off at
a brisk trot instead of the intended canter. What went wrong?
Without "being there" and observing the interaction,
the only thing we can say for sure is that the communication between
you and your horse failed. Why it failed is a more complicated issue
that frustrates multitudes of riders daily. You are not alone.
Communication can fail because of rider error. It
can fail because the horse is not sufficiently far along in its
training to understand the shape that the rider's aids suggest.
It can fail because the horse is physically unable to take the shape
because of conformation faults, old injuries, lingering soreness
from yesterday's workout, or equipment that restricts or interferes
with the shape. It can fail because the horse is mentally burned
out. Or the communication can fail because the horse simply has
the kind of personality that says that day, "I don't want to," or
"You can't make me" or "You didn't ask the right way so I'm going
to ignore that."
You need to examine your particular communication
failure from all of those different perspectives in order to figure
out why things didn't go according to your plan. The first thing
to ask yourself is whether the horse is capable of understanding
your request. Where is he in his training? Is this something he's
just learned or a movement he's been doing for some time?
Next, ask yourself a few questions about the horse's
body condition. Is this a new horse that might be happier with a
different saddle or bit than the ones you have chosen? Could the
horse be a little sore from strenuous work his last time out? Are
you asking for a movement that might be difficult for this horse
given his current level of physical conditioning or his conformation?
Think about the horse's mental condition. Have you
been drilling this or similar movements a great deal recently? Have
you just returned from a stressful show or other event? Or has he
been confined for several days without any opportunity to play a
little before working?
Be honest about your riding skills. Is the movement
you asked for something that is relatively new in your riding experience?
Is this a movement that other riders can get from this horse easily?
Are you completely relaxed, balanced and following the motion of
the horse as you apply your aids? Are you applying the correct aids
in a coordinated way with the right timing and right degree of pressure?
When you put the answers to all of these questions
together, what you need to do next will be much clearer. For example,
if the horse is green, he may just need more quiet repetitions of
exactly the same aids applied in the same rhythm with exactly the
same timing and degree of pressure until the light bulb goes on
in his head that this particular set of pressures goes away when
he takes the right shape. Until that happens, the rider may be doing
everything correctly but the results of the communication will be
uneven.
This scenario assumes, of course, that the rider
has an independent seat and can apply aids in a way that influences
the horse. If not, then there's the root of the problem. She needs
to keep on practicing, using the horse's response as feedback that
helps her learn when she's got it right. Until the rider gets better,
there will be many more times ahead when the communication is less
than perfect. That's all right. Work with a good instructor who
can help you through the rough spots as you develop the independent
seat you need for clear communication.
If the horse is an old campaigner who absolutely
knows what piaffe means or how to do a perfect rollback, then the
rider needs to ask if the horse may be hurting physically or is
burned out mentally. If the horse is sore or sour, then they should
do something else that day until those problems are resolved. If
those aren't issues, then the rider needs to consider the horses
personality. Is this an animal that sometimes has an attitude or
that looks for ways to evade its work? Then you may need to repeat
your request, reinforcing it by using a greater degree of the pressures
you know the horse understands or even enforcing the aids with the
spur or crop.
Depending on your own personality, your first reaction
to a communication breakdown may be to blame yourself for being
inept or stupid. Or you blame the horse for being stubborn or grouchy.
Or you blame the instructor for putting you on a second-rate school
horse that's not much fun to ride. Assigning blame does not fix
a problem. Instead, look at the communications failure as an opportunity.
The best way to improve your riding is to learn from your mistakes.
Just keep riding.
Faith Meredith coaches riders in dressage, reining,
and eventing and has successfully trained and competed horses through
FEI levels of dressage. She is the Director of Meredith Manor International
Equestrian Centre (Route 1, Box 66, Waverly, WV 26184; 1-304-679-3128;
www.meredithmanor.com), an ACCET accredited equestrian educational
institution.
(c) 2002 Riding Masters Ltd. For more information
contact: Faith Meredith 304-679-3128. Bonnie Kreitler 203-254-9230
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