Tip/Quote of the Day # 3212
"Until you can lengthen and shorten strides all other movements suffer." ~ Trevor Woodward
"Until you can lengthen and shorten strides all other movements suffer." ~ Trevor Woodward
"Effective aids are not exhausting to the rider and not souring to the horse." ~ Charles de Kunffy
The sign of a good rider is that their aids are so subtle and smooth that you can hardly see what they are doing.
When working with a horse that does not have a great natural lengthening, make sure that you don't ask for too much too soon. Compare this to a singer who is training their vocal cords… they gradually expand their vocal range until they hit their limit. This helps
A good halt is square because it was a good halt. Not because the rider has taught it the "trick" of squaring up after an unbalanced halt.