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Tip/Quote of the Day # 1378

"No complicated riding before the horses are going truly forward. In dressage, the difficulties are often created by a lack of good basic work (which is the foundation of the house)." ~ Nuno Oliveira

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Tip/Quote of the Day # 1377

"To ride a centerline correctly you need a good degree of balance and straightness. The horse must be even on both reins and obedient to the half halt. The entrance must be straight, the downward transition must be smooth and the halt square. The horse must stand at attention,

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Tip/Quote of the Day # 1376

In a Dressage test (and definitely when schooling), it is better to focus on the quality of your transitions, rather than insist that they be right at the letter. The judge would rather see a smooth, well balanced transition a little before or after the letter than a stiff, unbalanced

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Tip/Quote of the Day # 1375

"I study my horse, and my horse studies me. If I am a coward, he is one. If I am lazy, he is lazy. If I am impatient he is impetuous. If I am lost in thought, how dreamily he pursues his way!" ~ Unknown

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Tip/Quote of the Day # 1374

"If you keep your hands still, you’ll start using your legs." ~ Ulla Salzgeber

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Tip/Quote of the Day # 1373

"Look for the contact: The horse needs to trust and look for the reins in order to begin proper work. Try to let him chew. He should look for the reins, so don’t throw away the reins." ~ Isabell Werth

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Tip/Quote of the Day # 1372

On teaching the horse to be more careful over fences - "Let him hit it [the fence], don't make him hit it, let him hit it. The best teacher of the horse is the horse - he is his own best trainer." ~ George Morris

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Tip/Quote of the Day # 1371

"Your horse will tell you when he’s ready to learn something new when he responds to the aids more readily. He will be able to do that once his physical conditioning improves and the work gets easier for him. Don’t make the mistake of trying to advance

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Tip/Quote of the Day # 1370

Every well ridden corner is a suppling exercise, and should be recognized as such.

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Tip/Quote of the Day # 1369

Trotting into bigger fences teaches both horse and rider to wait for the base of the jump, as well as teaching the horse to use technique and bascule to jump rather than momentum.

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Tip/Quote of the Day # 1368

"If I ride a bad corner, I’m going to ride a bad movement. The short sides and corners are what set you up for every movement." ~ Charlotte Dujardin

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Tip/Quote of the Day # 1367

"Don't delude yourself into thinking that you have light, soft hands, if you ride with loose, almost dangling reins on a strung out horse. That can be done with insensitive hands as well. A soft hand requires the rider to feel whether the horse is softly on

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