Soundness, About the Rider Katie Boniface Soundness, About the Rider Katie Boniface

Is Your Horse Fitter Than You?

When your horse is fitter, stronger and more powerful than you, what can you do?

One of the common issues I see as a horse riding instructor is that my students horses are stronger, fitter and more powerful than they are. Well, let's truly be honest, when you are working with 500kg plus animals, they are more than likely going to at least be stronger and more powerful than you, if not fitter. Even if it is a 300kg animal you don't really want them to know how much stronger than you they are. I laugh when people talk about dogs being too strong for them to handle, which are at their heaviest 50 - 100kg, but which is still obviously a significant weight.

The key is not to be bigger or stronger, nor bully them into submission, but to create a channel of self expression through disciplined behaviour. Set parameters and boundaries in what you see as acceptable behaviour, follow through with consistency, and allow them to express their individuality constructively. This establishes you as the leader they want to follow and can trust instead of the dictator that they must follow or will suffer. 

One of the first goals I go about with a new student is to break down the power struggle and try to find a level of cooperation between horse and rider. I find a battle of the strongest is rarely successful because it has never worked for me let alone my students. 

Tips for establishing cooperation

Discipline

Is your horse fitter than you?

The easiest way for establishing a good working relationship is setting some boundaries and expectations. I choose to do this in a non threatening and easy to apply way. It needs to be consistent with each and every time you are handling your horse. It also needs to be done with compassion. The idea of bullying a horse into submission is dated, we don't need that for submission - in fact it works against us for true submission. Clear, well established boundaries are all that is needed. 

A horses behaviour is an expression of their personality interacting with their environment. 

How a horse reacts to an environmental stimulus is firstly defined by its' personality and secondly how it has been conditioned to react to stimulus. You can help set a standard for how you want your horse to work with you but you cannot 'make them behave'.

Consistency is the key.

If no matter how the horse behaves you react with calm, compassionate boundaries for what is acceptable and what is not, you are not only teaching your horse how you want them to behave you are also showing them through your demeanour. You can unintentionally set in action a cascade of poor behaviour if you:

·        React emotionally

·        Don't clearly define the behaviour you expect (or don't know what behaviour you should expect)

·        Don't follow through on these expectations

·        Are inconsistent with setting these boundaries

·        Allow other horses or people dictate that horses behaviour more frequently than you

Developing a relationship with your horse

This is a tricky one. You don't develop a relationship with a horse in a day, or a week, or a month. You establish it over a lifetime. Every interaction positive or negative is affecting your relationship with your horse. How you react in difficult and stressful situations teaches your horse whether or not they can trust and rely on you. How you guide your horse through difficult times is the crux of your relationship with your horse.

This is where having clear, established boundaries really come into their own. If you have established your expectations in a non-stressful, relaxed environment, followed through on these expectations to the reward, you can quickly and easily define your expectations in a stressful and over stimulated environment, channel the excess energy into focused energy and positively work through the situation. This then also reinforces your good leadership skills and the horses' trust in you to make good decisions for their well being.

You can actively take control of a situation that makes your horse uncomfortable and navigate them through to a positive resolution. Each time you can do this you are strengthening your relationship and your horses trust in you, your trust in your horse and your confidence in yourself to work through difficult situations with your horse. 

Know your why 

What is your why? This is an important part of your relationship with your horse.

If your why is at the detriment of the mental, physical or emotional health of your horse you are breaking their trust in you and breaking down your relationship. However if you are providing just the right amount of mental and physical stimulation to make them feel confident and good in themselves they will willing work with you in the development of their training.

Take the time to define why you are dedicating countless hours of work, training and money towards your riding. If your why is to get recognition or get a ribbon at a certain competition, this can mean that you compromise your horses physical, mental or emotional well-being and they will know what you are doing is not in their best interest. If you can confidently say your horses mental, emotional and physical well being is your primary objective the rest will come. Your horse will feel good for the mental and physical stimulation and will actively engage in their training with you. Best case scenario they will also look after you and teach you - if you are willing to listen and learn.

Level up your skills

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"Take a small step, normalise the behaviour, level up, never miss 2 in a row" Darren Rowse

Sometimes in training we are aimlessly shooting for the stars without a strategy of how to get there. It is important to dream big but your goals get a lot harder to achieve without a solid strategy.

Define the first thing you can do to work towards the big goal today and do it! Do it until it is a normal part of your routine. "Its just what I do." Work on that goal for 3 months until it is properly integrated into your routine and don't compromise this small goal more twice in a row. You will also be experiencing an ebb and flow between your horse being one step ahead of you and you being one step ahead of your horse. Keep working on improving your skill set. Understand the foundations and continue to revisit. Ride anything and everything you can. 

"You can't steer a ship 50 degrees at once, but if you move 2 degrees, then another 2 degrees and continue like this, years later you end up in a very different place from where you began. As long as you are steering in the right direction, your impact and progress is made over time" Illy

Get fit, get a strong core and get balanced in the saddle

If you want to be fit enough for your horse you need control of your core for an independent seat. You gotta get loose if you want to dance. One thing that I notice about my own riding (and I will be honest in this - it was so hard for me to learn but it was huge in getting me to where I am today): 

You have to be able to balance and move independent of your horse if you want to be a competent rider with a sticky seat. I have memories of YEARS worth of lessons with my instructors trying to teach me how to influence my horses movement with my seat and I just remember thinking this is impossible, there is no way I can do that and so relied on control of the horse with reins instead of creating an integration of movement through a cohesion of our bodies working together.

The thing I eventually learnt is that you had to let go of control to gain control. Trying to control the horses by griping and tensing is simply ineffective when you are trying to dance. Secondly I had to teach my body to be more sensitive to the subtleties of my horses movement. If I could only feel big shifts and evasions and imbalances then I would only be able to counter-correct movement. When I learnt to pay attention to each stride and each flex of a muscle I learnt how to get control of my seat and work with the horse with my seat. 

Make sure your horse isn't fitter than you

Don't lunge your horse 3 times a week if you are unfit and don't have the time to ride. You are only making your horse fitter and stronger than you are. It is better for your horse to be unfit and out of work than to try and keep them fit and not yourself. Optimally it would be great if you could both be fit together that would be ideal but life happens and that means sometimes we have to negotiate on a few things. The first to go is generally our self care. 

Equestrian Movement is passionate about self care and optimal health and believe it is pivotal to being an effective horse rider. We are athletes and you need to treat yourself as such.

Is your horse fitter than you?

Remedy that with our training programs: 3 Weeks to Improving Your Riding

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About the Rider Katie Boniface About the Rider Katie Boniface

HELP! I'm Afraid To Canter!

Are you afraid to canter?

Are you afraid to canter?

Most people at some stage of their riding career will go through a period of being too scared to canter.

Mine happened when I was 8 years old and I had my first fall.

It. Was. A. Doozy!

I was riding the old faithful of the riding school and we were doing games. I was cantering down the straight when, (and totally out of character for old faithful, Thomas) he turned into a bronco. He bucked me over his head and I landed on my head and flipped onto my back.

After that, it was a whole year before I cantered again. I remember every lesson being asked if I would canter that lesson and being terrified and sitting it out. Eventually, I worked up the nerve and started cantering again but it took a whole year for me to try.

 My second horse was also particularly good at bucking me off. It got too a point where I was too scared to ride him. We ended up sending him to an old bushy who spent a couple months working with him - but he said he was an absolute gem for him. At the same time, he would take me out on the weekends riding my horse while I rode his old faithful. Again I was terrified. I was so used to my horse bucking going up and down hills and basically any other given opportunity that I was terrified even on his horse.

My game changer?

My mum bought we a stock saddle for my horse. This meant that each time he bucked the wings kept me in the saddle and I was able to stay on, pull his head up. Eventually, I got really good at sitting bucks and pulling horses heads up!! It was a handy skill to develop to become a horse trainer. These days however, I prefer to not let my horses know they can be broncos.

What can go wrong with the canter.

Cold backed

If your horse is cold backed, the first canter few canter transitions is when your horse will buck.

The canter has natural scope and roundedness to it - whereas the movement of the walk and trot is flat and straight.

A horse can warm up hollow and flat in the walk and trot, and when this happens the first canter transition pulls over his topline and can trigger bucking in a cold backed horse. After the first few canters this should settle down and they can transition into canter without bucking.

This can be avoided by making sure the back is well warmed up before the canter and engaging the self carriage muscles correctly.

Need support with your riding? Check out our video course and exercise program focusing on improving your seat.

Need support with your riding? Check out our video course and exercise program focusing on improving your seat.

Rushing in the canter.

The longer the horse stays in canter the more on the forehand, rushed and unbalanced they get.

This can mean they pick up more and more momentum and it can feel like they are out of control. In this unbalanced, rushing canter it can be hard to pull up or turn the horse.

Often inexperienced riders will hang onto the horses mouth. If you are riding an ex pacer or race horse this actually encourages them to go faster and “take the bolt”.

You can correct this by spending lots of time on getting your horse to think “halt” & “rein back” in the walk from bit contact. Once you are ready to reintroduce the canter, spend time initially riding back to trot as soon as you’re in canter, then extending the canter for short periods before trotting again. Keep testing your brakes and riding back to the trot before the horse picks up too much momentum will help avoid the rushing, and the fear associated with it.

Stumbling.

The roundedness and scope of the canter can make horses more prone to trip and stumble if they are leaning heavily on the bit and not using themselves properly.

This can be improved by only doing short periods of canter, transitions into canter over the pole and making sure your horse isn’t on the forehand and leaning on the bit, especially in half halts and downward transitions.

 

Final Tip

The more established your seat is in canter the more confident you will be.

So if you are really struggling with your horse in canter a great way to improve your confidence is to go to a riding school and get some private lessons purely focusing on your seat in canter.

Periods of canter without the stirrups, transitions into and out of canter without stirrups and 2 point seat in canter for periods of time will all do wonders for your balance and confidence in canter.

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