Lots to catch up on!
I feel like even since I've last written I have improved in my riding and teaching. I have now had it from several of the instructors that my body position is solid. So relieved. Didn't think I'd ever get there. No more corrections about shoulders back and heel down and leg back etc. etc.
My current list of corrections to work on R.E. riding:
- Clearer with the aids. I need to be 100% certain what I'm asking for and how.
- Consistent contact on reins (still have curly wrists!)
- Strengthening the left side of my body. Turning my upper body to the right is extremely difficult for me. Makes lateral work on that side not-so-good, and hinders the horse.
- Using my core more than my hands/seat/leg.
- Sitting more on my butt during high collection movements.
I still need to concentrate pretty hard to keep my leg long. I do tend to get tense in my thighs and hips, but as long as I'm paying attention it's not too bad. I have gained so much body awareness in my time here!
I have been consistently riding the more advanced horses which is good fun. Particularly Lula, Gigi, Puro, Real (the Warmbloods) and Unico, Xairel the Lusitanos. I still have the odd ride on Ted, but haven't sat on Romeo or any of the ponies for a while (at least in lessons).
In the advanced lessons I'm (obviously) working on more advanced movements. Collecting exercises (e.g. halt to canter to trot to halt), lots of laterals as per usual (e.g. shoulder-in, travers, renvers, half pass in all three gaits) and some of the higher school movements. (e.g. canter pirouettes, tempi changes, piaffe/passage).
I think I had this idea in my head when I first came that once I knew how to ride properly, these movements would be easy to ride. The horses are well trained, after all, and if you give the right aid they should give you the right movement.
Reaaaaalllyy not so simple. I'm working harder now than I was at the beginning. It is VERY hard to get a horse collected properly to perform these movements, let alone keeping the collection consistently WHILE keeping my position and asking the horse to do something with upmost precision. This dressage is hard, yo.
There is so much running through my head while I'm riding. Like a mental checklist which I need to constantly be addressing as the instructor puts us through our paces. Serious brain power!
Lets take my last lesson as an example. I was riding Unico in a no-stirrup private lesson with Dawn. The first exercise I was to switch between shoulder-in and travers on the inner track along the long sides. Just to ride the movement, I'm thinking of the quality of his trot, the angle of the shoulder-in/travers, keeping him collected and pushing off his inside hind, making sure the bend is correct and true and that he stays straight on the inside track (which is really tricky to do!! no wall to support or catch him if we bobble!). While I'm concentrating on riding that exercise, I'm also running through my mental checklist to make sure my position is correct. Body turned to help bend, inside leg on girth, outside leg behind, 50/50 feel on the reins in each hand, leg long, core engaged, thighs/knees relaxed, eyes looking across the arena, shoulders open, inside seat bone weighted etc. etc. AND THEN Dawn is talking at the same time, giving me corrections. Too much bend in the neck, You've lost the outside shoulder, your rhythm has changed, You're on four tracks, not three, horse needs to be rounder, where's your body. Oh also, there was another rider in the arena with a horse Unico thought was pretty sexy. So keeping his attention while we passed the other horse was on my mind too.
So it's pretty tough on the old brain and body, and inevitably I get it wrong often enough.
Joao is always going on about being a 'thinking' rider. What he means is that during training the horse, we should think of different ways an issue can be improved, and using experience to know what correction to use. Right now I'm just trying to remember all the stuff that should just happen naturally. My hope is that by the end of my stay my position will be even more solid, so I can just ride without thinking about where my body is, and just focus on how the horse feels and what I can do to make it better.
I highly envy the riders who just naturally look good on a horse. I've had to work hard for this!!!
I highly envy the riders who just naturally look good on a horse. I've had to work hard for this!!!
















