| |
Communitcating by the Seat of
your Pants
by Faith Meredith
Director, Meredith
Manor International Equestrian Centre
WAVERLY, WV--Sometimes a super horse appears at the events where our
instructors are showing that really catches my eye. He is already
such a nice mover or I can see that he has the potential for three
good gaits as he progresses. The following year, however, I might
not even recognize the same horse much less tag him as a rising star.
His flowing gaits have become short and choppy. His soft jaw and relaxed
back are now clamped and tight. Instead of moving forward in his training,
he has deteriorated. When a setback like this happens, the reason
is often that his rider does not have an independent seat.
Developing a truly independent seat is the ultimate goal for a rider.
It is not about looking pretty on the horse. It is about being in
the right position with the right control over your own body in order
to be able to communicate clearly and logically with the horse. If
your horse feels the bit move in his mouth, it should be because you
are deliberately asking him for a specific shape or a cadence or a
degree of collection, not because you have momentarily lost your balance
or have become tense somewhere in your body.
Obviously, if you are bouncing around on the horse’s back or
grabbing at his mouth in order to keep your balance, that “noise”
is what he is going to listen to. If the way you are sitting or moving
on his back creates pain or discomfort for the horse, then any communication
is gone. Without an independent seat, it is impossible to properly
influence the horse’s mind and body in order to train it for
any higher level equestrian sport from dressage to eventing or cutting
or reining.
The rider must master six distinct skills as she or he develops an
independent seat. These skills have to be mastered in order because
each builds on the ones previously mastered to create a solid foundation
like the trunk of a tree. In fact, we call it the riding tree. With
a firm base, the rider can confidently branch out into any higher
level equestrian sport. If the rider tries to branch out without that
solid trunk beneath her, however, the branch is eventually going to
break or maybe the whole tree will topple.
The six skills to be mastered are, in order:
Relaxation (both physical and mental)
Balance
Following the motion of the horse
Learning to apply the aids
Learning to coordinate the aids
Using the aids to influence the horse
It takes many hours of riding on many different types of horses to develop
a truly independent seat. Even students in an intensive riding program
like the one here at Meredith Manor who have access to a great variety
of horses may spend their first year mastering just the first three
stages of the riding tree. Every student progresses through each stage
at a different pace depending on his or her own physique, temperament,
and previous riding experience. Sometimes a student masters one level
very quickly and easily only to find herself on a plateau at the next
level for weeks or even months. It doesn’t really matter as long
as she strives toward that ultimate goal of an independent seat. Once
a student achieves that, he or she can move confidently into any riding
discipline on any horse.
|
Join our mailing list and stay informed of new articles, product
and book reviews, and current news at Equestrian Days. Newsletters are sent
every other week, unless we have speicals or other important information we
don't want you to miss out on
One of the big problems in the horse industry is the fact that many
amateur riders and even some professionsals do not develop the independent
seat that they need to correctly influence a horse. When that happens,
their limitations end up limiting the horse.
Now every horse has his limits, both physical and mental. But those
limitations should be determined by the horse’s conformation or
his athletic ability or his temperament, not by the rider’s inability
to stay in balance over the horse or to follow the motion or to coordinate
the application and timing and degree of a set of aids.
I have seen even professional trainers trying to ride upper level dressage
horses who cannot follow the horse’s motion at an extended trot.
The minute that happens, they lose communication with the horse. They
cannot communicate with the horse and influence one stride and the next
and the next because they cannot follow the motion. Their “trunk”
is weak. The same thing would happen with a reining horse rider trying
to set their horse up for a spin or a rollback. If the rider is not
relaxed, balanced and following the horse’s motion as the horse
runs down the arena, he will not be able to coordinate the aids at the
end of the slide to communicate with the horse and influence the smooth
transition to the next movement he wants the horse to perform.
Having a truly independent seat means mastering all six skills at all
three gaits on any kind of horse. As you look along the trunk of the
riding tree and evaluate your own progress, you may find that you have
some of these skills on every horse but you only have others on some
horses at some gaits. Don’t be discouraged. It takes a lot of
hours in the saddle, a lot of mental concentration, a lot of small corrections
of a lot of mistakes, a lot of feedback from your horses and your instructors
to develop an independent seat. But what a high when you achieve it!
Just keep riding.
|