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lilmorganhorse
Beginner
Joined: August-07-2006
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Posts: 4
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Topic: starting dressage Posted: September-19-2006 at 7:15pm |
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hi everyone, i just bought a 12 hh pony thats extremely fancy and has alot of grace. ive been wating to start dressage but i have no idea how to do it, anyone have any tips or anything you could give?
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airborn
Beginner
Joined: October-15-2006
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Posts: 13
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Posted: October-15-2006 at 7:28pm |
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The first things I would work on would be transitions and circles. Work
on every transition and getting his response instant. Make sure your
circles are even & round. I started doing a bit of dressage a
couple weeks ago and these were the first things we focused on.
Maggie
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horskises
Beginner
Joined: January-07-2007
Location: United States
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 11
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Posted: January-07-2007 at 1:27pm |
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You also want to work on having a relaxed submissive horse. Not submissive in a bad way, just one that is willing to work with you in every way possible. If you want to start asking for him to be on the bit and have the dressage headset everyone knows so well, make sure that you ask from your legs first and ask him to relax his jaw for you. Implusion is Very important. Never try and force the headset because you will just agrivate your horse.
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Always Dressage
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eventer_crazy
Beginner
Joined: January-29-2007
Location: United States
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 4
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Posted: January-29-2007 at 12:48pm |
i would also ask a trainer as well
i just started dressage as well in july! its awsome! have fun!
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I love my horse razz!
my horse forum! http://razz8.forumcircle.com/
join!
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Horselover1990
Beginner
Joined: February-05-2007
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Posts: 8
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Posted: February-05-2007 at 6:02pm |
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Well, basically all dressage is the french's fancy word for training. In simplest terms; Through the levels, your horse will learn disciplined movements, gain equillibreum, become more responsive etc. In lower levels your horse just needs to be able to move forward and straight, have good transitions, and be on the bit (not collected, just on the bit). Good luck
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~Kimmy
http://www.equinepost.com/userpages/Horse_Trainer.html
www.willoughbyridgefarm.com
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Guests
Guest
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Posted: December-30-2007 at 7:42pm |
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Keep in mind also that being "on the bit" is not just how the horse is holding its head, it is how the horse is using its WHOLE body, especially its back. You don't want your horse tense. Make sure your horse can bend and flex also. I would definatley find a dressage trainer with a good reputation though, that way you have one person you are learning from, and you know exactly what to work on! :-)
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