12spot wrote:Okay thank you c: I always approach the fence in a deep two-point because he will just dolphin dive over it if I don't use my seat to keep him going. I'm working on getting him to move from my leg only, but he's stubborn haha. He also need the seat and hip through warm up or he won't go at all.
I get very paranoid about striding. So paranoid to the point where I try fixing it and that usually ends up with him taking long spots or awkward chips.
I have the base of death lol. My butt hardly ever leaves the saddle because I'm too nervous to not hold myself there. Too many bad experiences. No bad experiences on Quincey while jumping, but other schoolies yes.
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12spot wrote:The problem with Quincey is you can't warm him up without your seat. He will not move freely and forward unless you demand it. It's the struggles of a school pony. With that being said, once he's forward and warmed up I could do a lot of two point work to get myself ready for jumping and try to get him to respond of my leg, but by the time we get to the jumping I am too tired. He is the definition of lazy haha.
I ride with baby spurs and a dressage whip. I need to purchase bigger spurs because he respond better in those, but I don't have the money right now. And yes that is part of the problem with the long spots. It take a lot to get him to collect himself together and get him to move uphill. He is teaching me a lot though and we are getting there. I had two dressage clinics with Jaimey Irwin and it was very helpful. I can get him on the bit now at the walk and can get him to use his hind end (which I could never do before), but as soon as we move to trot it all falls apart. Canter is worse.

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fuzzyanni12 wrote:Well technically I don't ride I vault.
Who ever knows what vaulting is * high five *
I started in August and so it's been a couple months I wish I had my own horse but the stable has the sweetest mares and stallions ,my favourite is Ferrari he is the most sweetest gental horse ever he was the first one I "rode".
Vaulting is like gymnastics on horse back , it's really fun but dangerous.
» Mi Jan 28, 2015 11:47 am
So, I need some help.
I've always been a pretty nervy rider- especially with new things and jumping. The jumping thing stems from a) falling off my first time ever jumping and b) being stuck with the wrong saddle ( australian stock saddle ) for too long. the saddle pushes your leg backwards and throws you off balance- it taught me that, no matter how hard i tried, i'd always be off balance and almost fall.
once i got an all purpose saddle, i had a newfound confidence on my old guy ( sweetest horse ever ). in the next month, i was happily jumping 80cm spreads and loving every minute of it. then, i accidentally pushed my old guy too far. we were out xcing, and i meant for him to only go over the 60cm part of a log- he got the wrong striding, and attempted to run out, but couldnt because of a tree, so his only choice was to attempt jumping the high ( 1m 10 ) end- he scraped it, literally. he did the whole flick-to-the-side to get his back legs over.
after that, i was okay, but he wasnt. he was terrified of jumping.
either way, we'd sold him before the whole experience ( we were just waiting for his payment plan to finish ) and i had to sell him without jumping again. this was in late November.
I got my new horse, a nervous boy called McGrey. He got abused as a youngster, and has absolutely no confidence in himself- this is a problem, because neither do I. I'm terrified that, when we jump, I'm going to be too nervous and make him run out or refuse. His previous owner wanted to keep him, so she fed me up all these comments about how he's hard to jump etc. Now, since I haven't jumped ( or ridden, really ) for months, I'm so nervous about jumping I can barely think about it. I've galloped him on the beach and jumped him up to 50cm but after that I get too nervous.
Help?
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stirrupirons wrote:@Dragongirl: For sitting trot, abs are the most important thing to use. Exercise out of the saddle and build your core muscles. When actually sitting the trot, do NOT grip with your leg or thigh at all or else you'll tense and bounce. Stretch your hips so the angle is open and use your abs to push you into the saddle every stride. Keep your leg underneath of you in line with your hip. If you have the balance, drop your stirrups and practice not relying on your legs to keep you in the saddle, focus on your core. Stretch tall, keep a bend in your elbow with your elbow pressed into your hip, and don't pull on the horse's mouth.
For posting trot, keep your leg underneath you once again. Use your thigh muscle and core to post, not your entire leg. Your core will help you post softly. Post not up and down but swing your hips towards the horse's ears. Same with sitting trot, keep your elbow pressed into your hip and an angle in your elbow.
@Inky: A half circle is exactly as it sounds - a half circle. In the test I'm showing this year (first 3) there is a half circle at the end. Hime explained it well :)
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I had an AMAZING clinic on Thursday! The PSG trainer really liked Ellie and showed me how to ride her quicker, not stronger, so she wouldn't essentially give us the finger every time we took some contact. Ellie has been SO much better because of it. I got her to actually round at the trot and hold it for longer than a circle yesterday, and the rest of her work was fantastic. She kept her haunches engaged at the canter instead of pulling herself around on the forehand as usual and I played around with some lengthenings and shortening transitions and she was SO amazing. I got the best lengthened trot out of her across the diagonal and I got a baby extended canter too on the long side! And her shoulder in and haunches in have improved so much... she's not twerking her head in and faking it anymore. I'm so excited for my trainer to see how she's going with me tomorrow in our lesson :)
Talking to the clinician about contact
My princess <3
stirrupirons wrote:stirrupirons wrote:@Dragongirl: For sitting trot, abs are the most important thing to use. Exercise out of the saddle and build your core muscles. When actually sitting the trot, do NOT grip with your leg or thigh at all or else you'll tense and bounce. Stretch your hips so the angle is open and use your abs to push you into the saddle every stride. Keep your leg underneath of you in line with your hip. If you have the balance, drop your stirrups and practice not relying on your legs to keep you in the saddle, focus on your core. Stretch tall, keep a bend in your elbow with your elbow pressed into your hip, and don't pull on the horse's mouth.
For posting trot, keep your leg underneath you once again. Use your thigh muscle and core to post, not your entire leg. Your core will help you post softly. Post not up and down but swing your hips towards the horse's ears. Same with sitting trot, keep your elbow pressed into your hip and an angle in your elbow.
@Inky: A half circle is exactly as it sounds - a half circle. In the test I'm showing this year (first 3) there is a half circle at the end. Hime explained it well![]()
--
I had an AMAZING clinic on Thursday! The PSG trainer really liked Ellie and showed me how to ride her quicker, not stronger, so she wouldn't essentially give us the finger every time we took some contact. Ellie has been SO much better because of it. I got her to actually round at the trot and hold it for longer than a circle yesterday, and the rest of her work was fantastic. She kept her haunches engaged at the canter instead of pulling herself around on the forehand as usual and I played around with some lengthenings and shortening transitions and she was SO amazing. I got the best lengthened trot out of her across the diagonal and I got a baby extended canter too on the long side! And her shoulder in and haunches in have improved so much... she's not twerking her head in and faking it anymore. I'm so excited for my trainer to see how she's going with me tomorrow in our lesson
Talking to the clinician about contact
My princess <3
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