That's right, it's YOUR turn to giggle in sadistic glee while someone else has to do two-point sans stirrups.
This week was the annual George Morris Horsemastership Training Session down in Florida. Sans George Morris due to illness, from which he is now on the mend, fortunately. I confess, I don't usually watch it because George Morris is so fond of, well, George Morris. But I tuned in this year because his shoes were filled by renowned jumpers Anne Kursinski, Beezie Madden, Kent Farrington, and Mclain Ward and it was generating a lot of chatter over on COTH. And if Chronicle folks have their knickers in a twist, I just HAVE to check it out.
Go watch it now, particularly the first day.
Anne Kursinski gave a masterclass on flatwork. Each and every horse in there went better at the end of the session and each and every rider became more effective and more connected to their horse. In essence, she told them, don't pose up there like a phony equitation zombie, be inside the horse, not just on top of him, breathe with the horse and improve him.
She got on a horse who was giving his rider quite a bit of trouble, resisting the contact and rearing. I'm a very visual learner, so watching her work through that and seeing the quiet, patient way she taught him to accept the aids with incredible steadiness and fairness to the horse was like an epiphany for me. None of it was terribly new information but for some reason, it brought everything together for me.
The next morning, I got on Encore, I translated what I had seen into the feel of my body and we crashed through our dressage roadblock like a runaway transfer truck.
I guarantee there is information in there for you too. Anne does two groups (I only watched the first, about 1.5 hours) then Beezie does a demo ride with a new horse of hers (the last hour of the 3 hour session of day 1). Beezie explains that the horse has been showing 1.5 m (4.9') jumpers but is very green to flatwork, which baffled my mind, but ok, I'm not Beezie Madden.
There are still two more days to watch; I've checked out the farrier session, picked up a few handy tips, finessed my gymnastic work with Kent, and introduced a horse to the big water with Mclain. All for $0, exactly in my price range. I've included the link to the channel on USEF Network above, but in case you missed it: click here.
This week was the annual George Morris Horsemastership Training Session down in Florida. Sans George Morris due to illness, from which he is now on the mend, fortunately. I confess, I don't usually watch it because George Morris is so fond of, well, George Morris. But I tuned in this year because his shoes were filled by renowned jumpers Anne Kursinski, Beezie Madden, Kent Farrington, and Mclain Ward and it was generating a lot of chatter over on COTH. And if Chronicle folks have their knickers in a twist, I just HAVE to check it out.
Go watch it now, particularly the first day.
Anne Kursinski gave a masterclass on flatwork. Each and every horse in there went better at the end of the session and each and every rider became more effective and more connected to their horse. In essence, she told them, don't pose up there like a phony equitation zombie, be inside the horse, not just on top of him, breathe with the horse and improve him.
She got on a horse who was giving his rider quite a bit of trouble, resisting the contact and rearing. I'm a very visual learner, so watching her work through that and seeing the quiet, patient way she taught him to accept the aids with incredible steadiness and fairness to the horse was like an epiphany for me. None of it was terribly new information but for some reason, it brought everything together for me.
The next morning, I got on Encore, I translated what I had seen into the feel of my body and we crashed through our dressage roadblock like a runaway transfer truck.
I guarantee there is information in there for you too. Anne does two groups (I only watched the first, about 1.5 hours) then Beezie does a demo ride with a new horse of hers (the last hour of the 3 hour session of day 1). Beezie explains that the horse has been showing 1.5 m (4.9') jumpers but is very green to flatwork, which baffled my mind, but ok, I'm not Beezie Madden.
There are still two more days to watch; I've checked out the farrier session, picked up a few handy tips, finessed my gymnastic work with Kent, and introduced a horse to the big water with Mclain. All for $0, exactly in my price range. I've included the link to the channel on USEF Network above, but in case you missed it: click here.