1. Using the neck stretcher. Sandy adjusted it to the right length for Winnie. It’s pretty long, but it works.I had her knot it at the right length. We used them instead of side reins and Winnie’s head tossing was kept to one or two resistances.
2. When Winnie falls out of the circle by sticking her butt out of the curved line , which she did at one point most times we passed it, use my outside rein and leg to direct her back in. Don’t wait for her to this for more than a stride, if that. Correct her as soon as she starts to drift.
3. Winnie’s not a hot horse, bring the whip and hold it with the inside hand, laid across my thigh until needed. Just use it on her shoulder for a tap if she ignores my leg.
4. Don’t turn my heel in and toe out to communicate with Winnie, instead bring my leg in and slightly back, flexing at the ankle joint. Use the inside top of my calf to tell Winnie to go forward. If she ignores it, follow with a tap with the whip immediately.
5. Follow Winnie’s mouth by letting my elbow, to hand move at a downward angle not straight back and forth.
6. Sit the trot first (rising as the outside shoulder does) before asking for a canter depart. Don’t let her run into it, instead make a clean transition.
7. Practice lots and lots of walk-trot and some trot-canter transitions concentrating on keeping a constant following contact with my hands. I tend to focus on my leg and seat and let the reins get slack or loopy. (Amazing how little looseness Sandy refers to as loopy.)
8. Keep my heels down and flex in the ankle, knee and hip with my head up and my shoulders back and my butt glued to the saddle during he caner. I must be getting better at the flexing as I only lost my stirrups once cantering. It’s so easy to let my legs get loose and swing when I’m trying to follow with my hips.
Lots of books recommend dropping your stirrups or removing them entirely to work on a better seat. I think I’ll wait until I can do everything correctly WITH stirrups before I try that again.
I can’t believe how difficult it is just to get nice basic gaits. It looks so easy, but it’s so hard! Thankfully, Winnie is a nice, calm horse who is easy to work with and already knows the basics. I just need to catch up.
