Last weekend, I hauled to Cincinnati for the first time since December to ride with my trainer's trainer, OLGW, on Saturday.
ROAD TRIP |
I had a feeling I would like her. She comes highly recommended from Kate, she's well-indoctrinated into the MW School for Teaching People How to Teach Riding, and she's shortlisted for the Olympics, what's not to love?
She knew of me before this clinic even though this was the first time I'd ridden with her, because GP trainer had shown her videos of her riding Connor while the two of them were in Florida together last winter. And it was REALLY great to have the two of them sitting next to each other during this ride, GP trainer learning and commenting and collaborating with her on where Connor and I are on our journey.
OLGW on the left, GP trainer in the middle |
You know how when we were looking for my current house we wanted something with A/C, a fenced yard and a garage, and we ended up with a 130 year old house that had none of those things but it was perfect anyway? That's how this lesson was. I said I wanted to work on simple changes, and we didn't even canter! But we did identify and fix a fundamental issue that is blocking the simple changes, and in the end I got exactly what I needed.
If you try sometimes well you might find you get what you need |
From the beginning, she identified that I have a submission problem. "He probably feels like his body is going in several directions at once," she said. Yes, this horse feels like riding a noodle at all times, lol. She had me put him on a circle and use the inside leg and inside rein to ask for bend and turning. That it. Oh, and a LOT of forward, because she identified that it's harder for him to be a noodle if we have enough forward (without running him off his feet).
"You won't ride like this forever," she said (anything in quotes I'm paraphrasing, btw), "But he needs to learn to follow his nose around a circle and maintain his shape without you doing so much. Maybe because of him starting his life as a driving horse where they don't do a lot of tight turns and bending, he doesn't want to maintain this shape very easily, but you can't micromanage that forever as you go up the levels. This circle should get easier to ride and more consistent as he gets better at this."
My outside aids during this were to remain supportive and neutral, with my outside rein allowing a pretty dramatic amount of "outside banana curve".
My outside leg, interestingly enough, she identified as blocking him from opening up and lengthening the outside curve of his body. I would never have told you my outside leg was active until she said that, and then I realized she was very right, AND that Aeres had practically screamed at me about this same thing last winter. So I thought about my outside leg remaining off or maybe neutral.
My outside leg is too active here and that's probably implicated in me sitting off to the left here too |
The longer we went on (and oh boy, we did this for a long time, although we did throw in so LY and SI on the circle too), the more consistently he was able to maintain the shape, the less work I had to do to keep it, and the more his body felt like it was going in one direction rather than many. That doesn't meant though that he didn't continually try to find ways out of it.
She made me laugh, because he would be going well and she would be quiet for a second, and then she would say, "He's thinking '...hm,' right now", and that's exactly what it felt like, like he was taken aback by this change and was trying to plan his next move to get me to knock this new stuff off. "He's like riding a boat with holes in it, you plug one hole and think you've got him and then he springs a leak somewhere else."
Connor going pretty well, but trying to find another place to spring a leak as we approach the trainers |
I had audited some of her earlier lessons, and those were very biomechanics-focused a la MW, so I was surprised that her lesson with me was very different but just as effective. This is a trainer with a SERIOUSLY broad toolkit that doesn't get stuck in a single mode of teaching. And she didn't get hung up on the stuff that didn't matter, like me riding in a jump saddle, which she only mentioned once, in passing, to explain that I needed to ride a particular moment differently in a jump saddle vs a Dressage saddle and why.
The thing I liked best about her was how horse-focused she was, and how she treated me as an equal even though I am many levels of atmosphere below someone shortlisted for the Olympics. She asked me to advocate for my horse if I thought he needed a break, complimented our training so far, and was very kind to him even though we were pushing him so far beyond his comfort zone.
I was so disappointed I could only ride one day with her this time, but she's here for three more clinics between now and the end of October, so if I can find the money (gulp), I am definitely signing up for as many rides as I can. Between how effective she is and the fact that my GP trainer is watching these lessons and getting more ideas for us, she's very, very worth the price of admission.
Definitely had a very similar lesson from her once! It was so fundamentally helpful for teaching Bast about my outside aids, though that seems counter-intuitive.
ReplyDeleteA lot of the feedback I gave her was "I knew this was a problem, but I never would have thought to solve it with this set of aids in this way", so counter-intuitive is exactly right.
DeleteVery cool and I feel like that is Roscoe in so many ways. Except I am more of an issue. I can honestly say driving horses make tight turns, Rosemary would do a turn on the haunches the turn at the end of a road. The shafts actually helped maintain a straightness that can be hard to achieve under saddle. She was a way easier to move laterally than Roscoe because of her driving.
ReplyDeleteYeah I don't disagree, but I think Olivia wasn't referring to the turning radius but rather the amount of bend achieved through the turn, which as you point out, the shafts prevent that banana shape we were going for under saddle from happening. It was an interesting thought!
DeleteWhat an awesome opportunity. You guys look great :) You had mentioned it in a previous post, but are you considering doing pony cup this year?
ReplyDeleteI am definitely doing Pony Cup this year unless something dramatic happens. I paid the $50 membership fee already, and GP trainer has multiple students tentatively going. You should come hang out, blogger Leah is going to come hang out also!
DeleteI love those lessons where you step back and find that one little thing that's been causing so much trouble. Glad it was so productive for you guys!
ReplyDeleteFor sure, very worth the drive.
DeleteMaybe Coco needs some dressage (she's a hunter) bc holy smokes is she a noodle, too! Thank you for sharing!
ReplyDeleteEveryone needs Dressage!
DeleteI love this! I just want to get so good at seeing basics in my riders and developing them - while intellectually it can seem relatively straightforward a la andrew McLean, in practice you have to be able to approach these things from SO MANY PLACES.
ReplyDeleteThat is very true. Look at how many years I've spent staying at Second Level and figuring the basics out, and having to hear the same thing in different ways from multiple instructors before it clicked. It's so hard but so important.
DeleteThis was helpful to read, as we are struggling with the outside aids at the moment tracking right!
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad!
DeleteThis is so fascinating, because working on submission in just this way was how we approached dressage with Murray from the very beginning. While I definitely developed an over-dependence on the inside rein because of it, once I started riding with both reins, I think that my ability to get him on the outside rein was superior to any of the horses I've ridden since him. But, I could be seeing things a little rosily since it's been a while. And let's not pretend he wasn't still a noodle with all that inside bending!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad I waited to reply to this comment, because last night's lesson really drove home exactly what you said. If he was soft on the inside rein and bending through his entire body from nose to tail, it was much easier to get him into the outside rein and that was a huge part of my problem with C-W tx's. I was almost hesitant to write about this clinic ride because the line between doing what she told me to do and over-riding the inside rein is SO slight, but you know, I never promised this blog was a how-to guide, lol.
DeleteWhen I stare at the gifs back to back, I can totally see the difference. He looks amazing!
ReplyDeleteThank you! I'm so happy with where he's at.
DeleteShe sounds super cool!! I have heard so many good things
ReplyDeleteRidiculously good. Butt-puckeringly expensive, but worth it.
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