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Saturday, May 30, 2015

Leg yielding and being on the aids.

Today I had another awesome lesson with J. What will I do without these riding lessons..I don't know. They are just the best!

J had me try a leg yielding exercise today that would challenge both my clarity in giving aids as a rider, and Max's quickness to listen.

We started at a trot and she had us trot from C to E and at E leg yield at the fence to the corner, then trot from A to B and then leg yield again to the corner. Rinse and repeat. After that we did it at canter/trot. This is when it started to get really fun. We would canter from C to E right up to the fence, transition to trot, leg yield, then canter at the corner from A to B, leg yield at the trot and so forth.

Then we did it all in the canter. Max felt like a soft bouncy pillow. It was an amazing feeling!

Left lead canter




Right lead canter


Pretty much everything I asked, he gave. I never had to ask loudly, and I never had to ask twice. Before our lesson we even walked through some huge puddles with scary reflections and ripples. He was a little hesitant but after some sniffing and looking he walked right in. We even stood in the middle of a deep puddle and he started to paw at it and play with the water. Hmm maybe it's time for some cross-country lessons!!




5 comments:

  1. yessss you should definitely try cross country lessons!! haha sounds like a great ride all around :)

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    Replies
    1. Your posts make it look sooo fun! Looks like I'll have to be more solid over jumps though...and a large body of water might just tip him over to crazy-land!

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    2. eh - the water is only really important if you want to compete. plus, who knows - after schooling once or twice max might be so gung ho about it that the water doesn't bother him (tho, sadly it still bothers my mare lol)

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  2. The best feeling is when you end a lesson and your horse feels different. That's when you KNOW you worked hard and were successful

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