A little fun in hand

A little fun in hand
Conversano Sabarita teaching me Piaffe

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Ronin 1-20-11

I apologize for neglecting my blogging! I have been sitting at home recovering from a pinched nerve in my neck for almost two weeks now! It gets better and then it gets worse....I push myself to do more and I end up incapacitated again....:O) Such is life! Luckily riding is something I can still do with a pinched nerve.
I gave Ronin his first day off since I started working him two days ago. Last night I went to the barn around 6pm to lunge him and Joker. I free lunged Joker over some jumps and then brought Ronin in. This time Escipion was here and we put him in a Linda Tellington Jones body wrap. We tied two polo wraps together and pulled it snug across his chest, cris crossed it over the withers and then wrapped it around his butt and tied it snugly near his hip bone. Ronin is a little tense on the lunge line and it was interesting to notice how with the body wrap on he was less likely to lean in on the circle and take quick steps...and I felt like his back muscles were more connected behind his withers. Anyways, the point is Ronin liked it, I liked it....I believe we will keep using it once in awhile. I like to experiment with different things and am very interested in non-resistant horse handling techniques.
Today I rode Ronin again. We have cut out the lunging before hand and I just get on now. I would like to do more ground work with him as he is very sensitive and easy to work with on the ground....he REALLY gets me thinking "How am I going to influence this horse, get a step in exactly the right direction at just the right speed/stride length WITHOUT startling him?". With most horses I am interested in teaching them what I "know" and I use relatively the same system/approach. Ronin and I are using a slightly different language. More subtle....more in the moment.
I am sorry! There I go lost in a Dressage inspired Zen moment. Back on track now!
Anyways, I got on Ronin and did a little collected walk at first (he usually wants to power/speed walk...and I HAVE to slow him down and get his brain back right away!) Whenever I am working on collected walk I am simultaneously working on a working or lengthened walk as well. I always go between one "gear" and another (Very gradually....inch by inch.....step by step) to create more adjust ability in the horse's stride/frame/body.
Then we go on to the trot and do the same thing...collecting the trot and lengthening it out for moments at a time. When your teaching a horse such as a thoroughbred to lengthen their stride they tend to lose the "scope" in their stride (lost balance) and hurry off on the forehand with tiny fast little steps. Your goal is to lengthen them out just a few strides before that moment when they LOSE everything....and then bring them back to a working or collected trot before you try again. The trick is FEELING those moments and being effective without interrupting the horse's movement. We practiced some walk/trot/walk transitions and then moved onto canter work (His favorite part!!)
His stride length and cadence is improving so much over the last few rides, Ronin has a few different "gears" now (although he is still refining his "gears"). Next we worked on our canter. Canter can be a funny thing with Ronin. He has a really large stride for a little guy! If he is cantering with enough impulsion he feels like a rocking horse! Okay. So, when I ask for the canter transition I check my position, move my outside leg back as I lift up my inside seatbone ever so slightly and put on my inside leg. With this horse it is crucial not to "hold him in his face" EVER but especially in the transition to canter unless you want to produce some bucking! We made a nice smooth transition into canter and Ronin quickly reminded me to sit back, loosen my thigh, follow his motion, and lengthen my reins. He showed me these things by porpoising around the circle a few times. "Porpoising" is something that all horses do....but thoroughbreds have a tendency towards this 'airs above ground' for some reason. Porpoising is really quite easy to ride through (better than a buck!) because the horse will push off the ground with his hind legs and dip his forehand, land on his front legs (bring hind legs under) and push off very strongly from the front legs, and then push off behind again. Most TB's like to do it in the canter. :O)
After I fixed all of the things Ronin had on his checklist he really started to round his back and come into my contact. By this time Escipion had arrived and we began to do some spiraling in and out in the canter. First I would spiral him in, really focusing on moving his shoulder in, establishing bend from my inside leg, and slowing/collecting our stride. As soon as he would bend from my inside leg I would spiral him out gradually on a little shoulder fore shape. This exercise is really great for him as he needs to be suppled and learn to bend both sides of his body.
I ended our ride today by taking him for a little walk outside. He was a little hesitant to leave the barn (Can you say STICKY to my leg!?!? lol) but did not make any drama and we hacked the XC field between the 2 main barns. He was a little eager to get back so we practiced some walk/halt/walk transitions, circles, and leg yield zig zags. What a great ride!!

Ronin (session 4-6)

I have been lunging and riding Ronin. I lunge him for a few minutes before I get on focusing on rhythm, relaxation, balance. We have been doing lots of transitions, spiraling in and out, and moving around the arena. My rides have been very laid back. He is very energetic and a little spooky. All he does is shy at things for a few minutes and if you hang tight and keep your aids there but relaxed...he settles right into his work.
Today was the first day we cantered! It was wonderful! He has such good natural engagement it is great to ride such a talented youngster!

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Ronin's beginnings (work session 1-3)

Ronin is a 5yo TB that stands somewhere around 15hh. He is very alert-eager to communicate and please. His movement is a little quick and nervous but amazing. I am thrilled to work with a horse of his caliber.

He is already under saddle and I am riding him to get him going and keep him fit and ride able until his mom comes home from overseas.

The first time I lunged Ronin he has was very excited....ran circles around me, diving in and diving out. He was trotting so fast and with so much engagement he looked like a tarantula! I tried a few different things to get him to slow down. Its been a long time since I focused on creating balance, straightness, and contact on the lunge without the use of auxillary reins....took me a little while to find Ronin's particular language. First I tried wiggling the lunge line on the side of the circle he had been diving in on (diving in, for those of you that do not know horsey lingo means that the horse is making the circle smaller , generally this means they are putting more weight on their inside shoulder). Second, I used my whip to try to move his barrel out by pointing at the spot right behind the girth with my lunge whip. Third, I tried shaking the lunge line harder and gave a little tug on it. He just started going faster! I stood there for a second and it hit me. It has been so long since I had lunged anyone but Joker and Marc (Joker who is voice and body trained, Marc who is body trained) and they are so confirmed in their lunging manners I forgot... One of my favorite tools to use with a horse that has lost control on a lunge circle and is too excited to interfere with: Changing your height. So I just squatted down...and he stopped, turned to look at me, and said "Whats going on? Why did you do that?"
Yes. This is a moment to live for. The moments that you figure out one thing about a horses language and you can get through to them. Now I have his attention.

So we lunged the rest of the session pretty nicely due to the newfound "downward transition button" of squatting. I did not ride him this time as he had a hard time finding his relaxation in the first place.

The second time I lunged him he was a completely different horse. He was relaxed.....swingy through his back....stretching his neck down and forward....nice long rythmic strides. I lunged him a few minutes in each direction and then got on. I had to pick up the contact right away because he was very ADDHD....looking at the mounting block, the mirrors, the ray of light, a pigeon feather on the ground, pigeons in the rafters flying around "EEEEEKK!!" Ronin says to all of these things...tenses his back and squirts forward a few steps. I just exhale and go with him...laughing at his boyishness. It is all very innocent energy...I trust this horse already. I ask him to go around in trot and he is relieved to get the energy out....we worked on a few trot, walk, trot transitions and lengthening and shortening our trot strides....be bopped around in two point for a minute and called it quits. It was a very nice first ride. This horse give me a lot of good feedback on my communication abilities.

The third time I worked with Ronin was like we had been doing this for years. Now I am trying to really refine his responsiveness to my body on the lunge....I am not to use the whip or the rope at all. The rope's only purpose is to control the straightness of his head and keep him on the circle. It seems to me that downward transitions are something Ronin needs to work on really badly. If you don't keep his attention he just gets sucked into this black hole of running around like a speedy-gonzolaz-tarantula. We worked on our transitions again....lots of Trot to Canter transitions on the right because he is not as confident in his canter strike-off on that side (I say this because he will sometimes cross canter on this side, showing me that there is a lack of flexibility, strength, and co-ordination in his hind legs). This is natural for a horse that has not been worked properly....or in Ronin's case a horse that has not been worked for a few months. It is especially common in stall bound horses and breeds with short croups (Arabs, Saddlebreds). Lunged him in both directions and them rode. Under saddle we worked on rhythm, relaxation, and stride length. I do not want to canter him undersaddle yet as he is still too unbalanced in the canter on the lunge and I feel it would be unfair. He has been tossing his head a little and his teeth have not been done in awhile....I called his owners and the vet is coming to do his teeth soon (His owners are really good people too!). No use working on a real contact until then, I don't wanna spoil the little guy's outlook on life. Ronin thinks I am just the coolest person around! I want to keep it that way.