Post by Elaine on Jun 26, 2010 20:30:02 GMT
OZZIE DAY 1
I couldn't keep track of what every else was doing but here is what myself and Oz got up to today at day 1 of the Silversand clinic. Bloody brilliant is all I can say so far.
;D
1. You want your horse to be really confident and brave, but not really desensitised. Ideally you want them really brave and really sensitive. So we did a run through of scary stuff. We pretended we robbed a bank and ran at our horses, threw ropes all over and made a lot of energy. Oz was a legend, stood fast asleep for all of it. Steve wanted to know how long it took me to train that into him as he was the total opposite last year. YYYYAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAYY!
One big thing I had to remember to do, was to bring up my energy before I cue the horse to go off somewhere so they have a bit of warning.
2. Ask horse to circle around you, with CORRECT (cough!) bend. At the start Oz had the feet moving the right way, but the bend was all wrong. He turned into a completely different looking horse after we did this exercise (pics below).
Basicially when horse circles around you,
- have a little but not too much bend in the neck
- have shoulders out from you a bit to get bend through body
- horses HQs to be the thing the furthest distance away from you
Oz tended to over bend his neck and also keep the HQs in. Steve was a bit amazed that he was soft enough to overbend his neck and reckoned Oz was 1000% better than last year YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!! (we'll work on the overbending). To get the HQs to move out, bump lead rein when outside hind about to lift off the ground and watch you don't just get a bendy neck instead - get to the feet. If horse rushing, stick your hand out in front of him to slow him down. Get the right shape in your horses body.
When asking for HQ yield, DO NOT STEP AWAY FROM THE HORSES FRONT END (which I didnt realise I was doing).
3. Soften with hand under bottom of halter. My backups had been not really soft, and then reason for this I saw was Oz wasn't soft in front before I started. So Steve got Oz REALLY soft in front, and OH MY GOD we did circle backups with NOTHING in my hands. Incredible. Incredible. Incredible. Never had it as good before. Steve says' that' really good Elaine you know!' The softness & lightness blew me away.
To backup a circle, tip head away from you and walk towards horses shoulder nearest you and HQs away from you. Get horse to do small circle.
Again, AMAZING!
4. Hopped up in saddle and 1 rein. Did 10 lateral flexions on both sides. Ok on near side, moved feet after about 5 on off side.
Then we wanted to do circle with bend like on the ground, so worked on using inside rein to ask for neck bend, inside leg to ask for shoulder/ribs softness and also had spare end of the rope to help out where needed. Technically should have woke don paper, but Oz started to get his own ideas about what he wanted to do and wasn't listening, so had to go back to basics and get control of the feet by doing the following:
- 3 steps backwards
- 3 steps forwards
- 1 or 2 steps backwards and do FQ yield
- walk forward
Everytime he rushed in the walk then backup and repeat the above. Got his mind back a bit more by the end, and hope to do all the nice softness and bend in circle tomorrow again.
But FAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAB day. That horse is just turning inside out and thank God Steve reackons he'd getting better!
I couldn't keep track of what every else was doing but here is what myself and Oz got up to today at day 1 of the Silversand clinic. Bloody brilliant is all I can say so far.
;D
1. You want your horse to be really confident and brave, but not really desensitised. Ideally you want them really brave and really sensitive. So we did a run through of scary stuff. We pretended we robbed a bank and ran at our horses, threw ropes all over and made a lot of energy. Oz was a legend, stood fast asleep for all of it. Steve wanted to know how long it took me to train that into him as he was the total opposite last year. YYYYAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAYY!
One big thing I had to remember to do, was to bring up my energy before I cue the horse to go off somewhere so they have a bit of warning.
2. Ask horse to circle around you, with CORRECT (cough!) bend. At the start Oz had the feet moving the right way, but the bend was all wrong. He turned into a completely different looking horse after we did this exercise (pics below).
Basicially when horse circles around you,
- have a little but not too much bend in the neck
- have shoulders out from you a bit to get bend through body
- horses HQs to be the thing the furthest distance away from you
Oz tended to over bend his neck and also keep the HQs in. Steve was a bit amazed that he was soft enough to overbend his neck and reckoned Oz was 1000% better than last year YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!! (we'll work on the overbending). To get the HQs to move out, bump lead rein when outside hind about to lift off the ground and watch you don't just get a bendy neck instead - get to the feet. If horse rushing, stick your hand out in front of him to slow him down. Get the right shape in your horses body.
When asking for HQ yield, DO NOT STEP AWAY FROM THE HORSES FRONT END (which I didnt realise I was doing).
3. Soften with hand under bottom of halter. My backups had been not really soft, and then reason for this I saw was Oz wasn't soft in front before I started. So Steve got Oz REALLY soft in front, and OH MY GOD we did circle backups with NOTHING in my hands. Incredible. Incredible. Incredible. Never had it as good before. Steve says' that' really good Elaine you know!' The softness & lightness blew me away.
To backup a circle, tip head away from you and walk towards horses shoulder nearest you and HQs away from you. Get horse to do small circle.
Again, AMAZING!
4. Hopped up in saddle and 1 rein. Did 10 lateral flexions on both sides. Ok on near side, moved feet after about 5 on off side.
Then we wanted to do circle with bend like on the ground, so worked on using inside rein to ask for neck bend, inside leg to ask for shoulder/ribs softness and also had spare end of the rope to help out where needed. Technically should have woke don paper, but Oz started to get his own ideas about what he wanted to do and wasn't listening, so had to go back to basics and get control of the feet by doing the following:
- 3 steps backwards
- 3 steps forwards
- 1 or 2 steps backwards and do FQ yield
- walk forward
Everytime he rushed in the walk then backup and repeat the above. Got his mind back a bit more by the end, and hope to do all the nice softness and bend in circle tomorrow again.
But FAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAB day. That horse is just turning inside out and thank God Steve reackons he'd getting better!