Developing
Balance: Using Your Horses Feedback
By Faith Meredith
Director of Riding, Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre
WAVERLY, WV--In order
to work together harmoniously, both horse and rider need good balance.
Riders who do not have a good sense of balance cannot follow a horses
motion. Unbalanced riders tend to stay on a horse by gripping with their
calves, gripping with their thighs, or hanging on the reins. Without good
balance of their own, they interfere with the horses balance and,
as a result, with its motion. Their ability to turn in a good, much less
top, performance is severely compromised.
A rider mounted on
a goldie oldie school horse or show ring packer can get away with riding
off balance. That is why these horses are so prized by instructors. They
are tolerant and patient by temperament and athletic enough to compensate
for the riders faults. Their forgiving nature makes them wonderful
as beginners mounts or for riders with confidence problems that
make it hard for them to relax.
The green baby horse
is another story. Even if he has incredibly good natural balance to begin
with, any young horse just starting under saddle is going to have a lot
of balance issues. He has to learn how to move all over again while carrying
weight on his back. Depending on his training background up to that point
and his temperament, the young horse may be apprehensive or confused.
If his rider is confident, relaxed and has good balance, the horses
first experiences will be positive. If the rider is unbalanced in any
way, however, the young horse may become nervous or frightened. Thats
just one of the many reasons why green horses and green riders are not
a good match.
The trained older
horse that is out of shape or the horse whose muscles are unevenly developed
for whatever reason can also have balance issues until their fitness and
muscling improves. Under an unbalanced rider, these horses may trip or
stumble or develop more sore muscles than necessary as their conditioning
program begins.
Understanding how
the riders balance can affect the horses movement can give
riders and their instructors important feedback. An off-balance rider
typically:
* Falls behind the
motion of the horse,
* Leans too far forward,
* Leans off to one side, or
* Shifts weight onto the wrong seat bone.
When a rider gets
badly out of balance, the horse gets uncomfortable. Depending on its age,
experience, and temperament, the horse will typically try to escape this
feeling of discomfort in one of several ways:
* Speeding up, shooting
forward or even running away;
* Slowing down or even stopping;
* Turning or drifting when the rider intended to go straight;
* Turning more or less than the rider intended; or
* Turning in a different direction than the rider intended.
For example, if a
horse is excitable and nervous, its flight instincts are probably
a lot stronger than its fight instincts. If its riders
weight gets too far back, not only is the horse uncomfortable but the
rider has figuratively opened the front door and invited him to take off
through it. These horses seem to be saying, Being out of balance
is scary. Im out of here.
Similarly, the rider
who loses balance and falls forward closes that front door. The horses
inclination to go forward is frustrated. If the horse feels blocked altogether
he is likely to stop. These horses almost seem to be saying, Get
your act together if you expect me to carry you around.
When a rider gets out of balance and shifts his or her weight on to the
wrong seat bone, there are usually other things going on that affect balance,
too. The rider may also be collapsing her ribs toward her hip. Or he may
have let his shoulder move forward, effectively blocking any turn in that
direction.
In all of these cases,
the horses reaction is a clue to the riders balance issue.
If your horse presents you with any of these reactions, pay closer attention
to your own balance and body position before blaming the horse.
When riders first
mount, they need to take a moment to position themselves correctly in
the center of saddle before moving off. The upper body should be tall
but not stiff. Be careful not to hollow the lower back. The rider should
feel an equal amount of weight on both seat bones. The joints should all
be loose and elastic. This allows the leg to drop and the hip joint to
open up. From the side, there should be a plumb line from the riders
ear through the elbow and hip to the ankle.
Everyone starts off
with balance issues and they come up again and again as a rider advances.
Use balance exercises both on and off the horse to help you progress and
just keep riding.
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©
2004 Riding Masters Ltd.
Faith Meredith coaches riders in dressage, reining, and eventing and
has successfully trained and competed horses through FEI levels of
dressage. She is the Director of Meredith Manor International Equestrian
Centre (Route 1, Box 66, Waverly, WV 26184; 1-304-679-3128; http://www.meredithmanor.com),
an ACCET accredited equestrian educational institution. |
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