T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1844.2 | 2 cents | CSOA1::AANESTIS | | Mon Jan 03 1994 15:14 | 15 |
| re.14
Why start with a dressage instructor if you can't keep your heels down,
leg on and hands quiet? Because if I had not gotten into pushing my
heels down (and forward), and arching my back in an attempt to keep my
legs quiet while out of balance with the horse, I would not have nearly
so much to unlearn! I have found the difference between hunt seat and
dressage instructors to be very great. Around here(PA), beginners are
put to fences long before they are ready in an attempt to make the
lessons more exciting. It would have been far better to start out on a
lunge line and develop a good seat instead of wasting my money to
become terrified of jumping. Your experience may be different, but my
advise to anyone looking for lessons is to look for a "balanced seat"
instructor, with well trained quiet horses to learn on.
Sandy
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1844.4 | | AKOCOA::LPIERCE | Happy New Year | Fri Jan 07 1994 11:16 | 15 |
|
I used to ride huntseat and I took huntseat lesson for about 10yrs.
I started to take balance seat lessons and I have learned so much
more about my riding and learned much more about the horse. I find
that everying in my balance seat lessons "make sence". I went to
watch a class rated A hunter show and I was appauld at the way the
riders road. I to would advise begginer riders to try balance seat
first, then make a decision on which seat you want to make your
ride of choice.
It's taken me about 2yrs to re-think all my huntseat habbits and
get rid of them. I feel more at 1 with my house now that I've
found my ride of choice.
Lkp
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1844.5 | What habits? | AIMHI::DANIELS | | Fri Jan 07 1994 13:11 | 2 |
| What were the huntseat habits you needed to get rid of? I have a few
myself, I'm looking for a matching list from someone else!
|
1844.6 | top 4 | AKOCOA::LPIERCE | Happy New Year | Fri Jan 07 1994 14:16 | 19 |
|
#1 hunt seat problem to overcome - Stop leaning forward!
#2 Stop being stiff as a board and to move w/ the horse
(learning to move w/ the horse has given me a nice comfy
sitting trott on any gaited horse)
#3 Use proper aids for the canter. Hunter seat, I would lean
forward and ask w/outside rain inside leg. now I push from
my seat and sit deep in my seat (hardest one to overcome)
#4 Not to rely on my rains for steering the horse
Those are just a few on the top of my head. Since balance seat,
it has been easier to train my horse, he picked up leg yeilds
very well (thou we still have trouble w/ being straight) and
he can pick up new things at the drop of a hat. Like, flying
leadchanges.. with the proper bend, you can achieve anything!
What are your?
lkp
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1844.7 | | CSC32::M_HOEPNER | A Closed Mouth Gathers No Feet | Fri Jan 07 1994 17:48 | 19 |
|
re: -1
I don't know that I would blame this on 'hunt seat' in general.
I have ridden with a lot of 'hunter' trainers that teach--
#1 Stop leaning forward!
#2 Stop being stiff as a board and to move w/ the horse
#3 Use proper aids for the canter.
#4 Not to rely on my rains for steering the horse
Those who study the George Morris method tend to teach the above. And
those riders tend to do the best at the shows.
In fact, a bunch of us who all studied with the same trainers competed
in dressage and horse trials as well as hunter shows. And we did
very well in dressage as well.
|
1844.8 | another 2 c. | KAHALA::HOLMES | | Sun Jan 09 1994 18:51 | 27 |
| >> #2 Stop being stiff as a board and to move w/ the horse
>> #4 Not to rely on my rains for steering the horse
After almost 4 years of balance seat lessons I have come to the
conclusion that it takes more than 4 years to really sit well.
The "hunter" problems, esp these 2 come from holding on to the horse
and not really Sitting well. The uppercase s is intentional.
I had seen a Hunter video, don't know the title where 2 women are
doing figure 8's over 2 calvetti placed end to end. Unarguably the
horses in the video were soft and supple.
In the last 4 months or so there was an interview with Morris, either
the Pedlar or the Equine Journal where he said the only way to ride
was classical, with jumping being forward seat of course.
Doesn't classical = balance seat = dressage ?
I rode hunt seat for about a year and a half and started dressage
after a 9 year layoff. Looking back any flat work was warm up for
jumping.
Bill
ps: But there is something incredibly comfortable about the
2 point position...
|
1844.9 | What my problems are | AIMHI::DANIELS | | Mon Jan 10 1994 11:03 | 16 |
| After 20 years of riding hunt seat, I now ride saddle seat, and my
biggest problem is leaning forward! I got bopped in the chin by my
horse a few months ago cause of this. Saddlebreds tend to have a big
rolling canter and I did my typical hunt seat thing and when his head
came back up, I caught it. Fortunately my tongue wasn't between my
teeth. My riding instructor says this is the *biggest* problem with
huntseat riders working in any other riding discipline, whether it is
saddle seat, stock seat, etc - this leaning forward.
The other problem, thought not as big for me, is stiffness in my lower
back so that sometimes I'm not rolling with the canter but banging on
the saddle.
I wonder what the theory was back in 1967, when I started riding, to
ride this way. Do hunt seat lessons today have you lean forward for
the canter? What is it about hunt seat that makes people so stiff?
|
1844.10 | Now, sit forward (-: | VLNVAX::CALEXANDER | If you wanna kiss the sky,better learn how to kneel | Mon Jan 10 1994 12:03 | 10 |
| re: .22
As a read only, I couldn't help but reply to this. My daughter has
been riding hunt seat for a year and a half, she is now age six. They
have instructed her to sit back in for the canter and go with the
horse's movements. I guess I was a little concerned/confussed in
seeing the replies of people being instructed to sit foward for the
canter? Seems a little risky, to say the least?
Candy
|
1844.11 | Stirrup Length a factor | ASDG::CORMIER | | Mon Jan 10 1994 12:19 | 28 |
|
Great Discussion!
Hunt seat can equal balanced seat. I think that stirrup length is a
big factor here. The short stirrup and normally larger knee roll on
huntseat/jumping saddles make it easy for the rider to instinctively
grip with the knee. (I've even heard some instructors say "grip with
your knees!") Once you grip with your knees, you are more likely
to be stiff elsewhere. Also, when you grip with your knee, you are
more likely to be popped right up out of the saddle, or the knee ends
up acting at a pivot point making it easier for you upper body to tip
foward and back. The longer stirrup used in balance/dressage, positions
the leg in a manner that enables the knee to be looser and allows for
an active lower leg. If your knees are gripping the saddle, your lower
leg comes off the horse and this makes it much harder to keep the horse
between your legs and on the aids. Riders that grip with their knees
are at the mercy of horse's who like to run out at fences because their
lower leg is ineffective. It is very important to try to consciously
keep your legs soft and at any discipline. 2-point positions are fine
as long as you aren't leaning too far forward and as long as you keep
your knees and legs relaxed.
My $.02
Simone
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1844.12 | A little more | AIMHI::DANIELS | | Mon Jan 10 1994 13:44 | 27 |
| A lot of people think that saddle seat is keeping the lower leg off the
horse and only gripping with the knees - dead wrong! I find saddle
seat much more comfortable than hunt seat was for me because of the
straight sitting up, using your whole leg against the horse - very
important for the equitation riders that have all the serpentines,
figure 8s, etc. Also, now that I'm using my whole leg, I usually :)
have a lot more feel of what the horse is doing underneath me.
The downside of saddle seat is that flexiblity in horses doesn't
usually have the same emphasis as huntseat. Though my particular
trainer works on the lunge quite a lot. Frankly, since I've started
riding saddleseat, my seat is a whole lot more secure than it was
riding huntseat and death gripping with my knees. I'm sure things are
fairly different now than they were during my formative years of riding
but "grip with the knees" just about sums up what I learned.
Interestingly enough, I've been reading a book called "Training the
Western Horse" written about 1949 and put out by the University of
Oklahoma Press. This writer started (I'm sure he's dead now, he was
fairly mature in the book back then), all his western horses under an
english saddle and worked them to a full bridle before moving them into
stock styles. His BIG complaint with hunt seat was the way "grip with
the knees" was THE BIG teaching style, because it only promotes an
insecure seat and stiffness. Also, saddle seat back then was grip with
the knees too. It's interesting to look that far back and see that he
was rather a visionary in this country for that sort of thing.
|
1844.13 | | CSC32::M_HOEPNER | A Closed Mouth Gathers No Feet | Mon Jan 10 1994 15:29 | 19 |
|
I doubt that any 'hunter' trainer who has riders competing regionally
or nationally tells their riders to lean or to grip with their knees.
This was a popular training method many years ago (when heavily padded
saddles were the rage). Currently, the top equitation riders use close
contact saddles, use the entire leg on the horse, don't pinch anywhere,
and tend not to 'lean'.
As far as two point and 'leaning' forward for beginner riders, that
position certainly can keep the rider from being pitched over the
horses neck by having the canter stride wham the horses back into the
rearend of the rider. Many trainers start young riders in this
position so they can get used to the rolling motion of the canter.
Then as the rider becomes more secure and supple, they have the rider
situp and DOWN into the saddle. Whether a rider should start out by
sitting the canter or riding the 2 point is an age old argument where
both schools have their benefits.
|
1844.14 | y | AKOCOA::LPIERCE | Happy New Year | Mon Jan 10 1994 15:54 | 14 |
|
When I went to the class A show this summer. I noticed that
all the hunter hack type of classes were filled, but the equatation
class was about empty. And the riders in that class were all
leaning forward over the horses neck. There was a well knows
trainer from WildAir farm in the ring also. Not 1 person was
sitting to the canter, they all looked like they were going to
jump something any minute.
After watching this class, and seeing instructers in the class
this gave me the opionin that they still teach riders to ride
this way.
|
1844.1 | How we got here | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Mon Jan 10 1994 16:43 | 20 |
| Extracted from Note 1839.14
MR4SRV::CHMIBU::MShamel 28 lines 3-JAN-1994 14:05
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[ most of stuff abou lesson rates deleted]
I also find the difference in prices for dressage and hunt seat
lessons interesting. While I am primarily a dressage rider, I find
that the basic principles are the same until you get to much higher
levels. As someone once told me, Jumping is simply dressage over
fences. The rider and horse must be trained. Especially for
beginners, I cannot see paying the extra money. If you cannot keep
your leg on, your heels down and your hands quiet, why pay more for
the lesson?
|
1844.3 | TERSE::FANTOZZI Did the reverse | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Mon Jan 10 1994 16:54 | 14 |
| TERSE::FANTOZZI 11 lines 5-JAN-1994 09:51
-< Did the reverse >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I rode hunt seat before I started my balance seat/dressage lessons.
When I went to my current instructor I was terrible. Everything was
stiff and tight and sloppy. I knew how to keep my heals down, etc. but
was as stiff as a board. I have found I have learned MUCH more in
balance seat/dressage lessons then I did with my hunt seat and have
developed into a much better rider than I was a year ago.
Mary
|
1844.15 | Classical Seat | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Mon Jan 10 1994 17:16 | 26 |
| Can't help but jump in here. I've never been known to pass a good
debate!
I recently started reading Sylvia Loch's book "The Classical Seat."
In it, she specifically cites George Morris and many of those who have
trained with him as being advocates of the classical seat *between*
jumps. She also cites the German showjumping riders as being
particularly adept at taking the classical seat between jumps. I would
add the French to that list. Watch them carefully in the next Nations'
Cup you get to see. Most of them ride in a classical seat.
Of the North American's, take a look at Ian Millar or Bernie Traurig.
Both ride and jump superbly in such a seat.
In Loch's opinion, the classical seat consists of sitting balanced on
your seat bones, being vertical with the body and being relaxed &
supple. She describes it as being similar to standing but with bent
knees. She says you can't take the classical seat with the stirrups
very short.
The obvious advantage of taking the classical seat between jumps is
that you have much more control over the horse. So, it's easier for
the rider to bend the horse, take tight turns in a jumpoff, adjust the
horse's stride(i.e. collect or lengthen it), align the approach to the
jump, etc.
|
1844.16 | Difference | TERSE::FANTOZZI | | Tue Jan 11 1994 12:34 | 20 |
|
After riding two years of hunt seat and then moving to balance seat I
had a ton of things I had to relearn and it has taken me a year to fix
those things.
I too had the same problems when I started balance seat. I leaned
forward, I could not sit to a canter I looked like I was cantering
also, my legs were very weak, I was stiff as anything, I could not open
my hips to move.
Needless to say, it was a very frustrating experience. I find now my
ride to be much more enjoyable.
Louisa has been video taping me over the past two years and there is a
noticeable difference from when I was hunt seat vs. balance seat. I am
straight, with no leaning forward.
Mary
|
1844.17 | I've seen it recently | AIMHI::DANIELS | | Tue Jan 11 1994 13:21 | 23 |
| At one of the shows held at the Deerfield fairgrounds this summer, I
watched one of the hunter pleasure classes. The winner was from L.M.
Turner stables and rode in the 2 point position completely. Also her
hands were lower than the withers of the horse. I sat with two people
who knew her and were thrilled with her win. I was really curious
because years ago my hunter was a real pleasure horse and we did well
in that type of class but it was at least sitting down if leaning
forward. These two people told me that this girl's horse is "cold
back" and you can't sit on cold back horses - you maintain the 2 point
position. I don't really buy that - I mean I've never seen a
Saddlebred that was cold back if you take that view - but for the point
of arguement say that a lot of hunter style horses are cold back - it
would seem to disqualify it even further for winning a pleasure horse
title. Also, riding with your hands below the withers continuously
didn't look like a pleasure to me. But I was assured that "lots of
hunters" are cold back. Just seems funny that from 1969 to 1975 when I
was really showing in hunter and handy hunter, no one ever rode in 2
point unless it was between jumps or getting ready for jumps. Also if
the horses were cold back, we never knew.
Probably like anything (Hypoglycemia was the big rage 15 years ago -
everyone had it), riding everything in the 2 point is a fad, but not an
attractive one.
|
1844.18 | overcoming the position | ELMAGO::HBUTTERMAN | | Tue Jan 11 1994 14:16 | 40 |
|
Hi everyone
I'm really enjoying this note... over the past 3 months I have
returned to riding (regularly) after almost 5 years of just cleaning
stalls, raising babies and starting the young horses in harness. Oh
I'd jump on my broodmares once in a while and take a trail ride, and
occasionally ride a friends horse - but nothing consistant.
Well, now my young mare (who will turn 4 this summer) has been
at the trainers (for 3 almost 3 months) for saddle work and every
Saturday I go and take a lesson. She walks, trots, canters, circles,
manuvers the caveletti's (thats a cute story) and goes forward nicely.
This has gotten me riding with a friend during the week as
well and now I'm actually getting back in shape. Next weekend I will
be bringing "d.v." home so that I can ride every day after work and
it will be really GREAT for both of us.
She is a morgan and seems destined for the "Classic Pleasure"
division - which is saddleseat - no long feet/pads/weight - and ridden
by an amature only. I rode saddleseat all my childhood - mostly
saddlebreds and a few Morgans and was taught to "hug with your knees".
Later in life I have ridden western pleasure and took some dressage
lessons. But probably most impactful - has been starting many young
horses under saddle - which has given me a (in the words of my trainer
"way too forward seat - you're gonna get BOPed in the nose!") position.
I also have been working on an extremely stiff lower back (I think the
two go hand in hand).
I know it will improve with daily exercise and both of us working
together - and I have had one lesson per month taped so I know I AM
improving - but I am really open to hearing how others have overcome
this "position" and replaced it with what my horse needs. That
includes some mental notation on my part to make sure my arms are not
frozen (so she doesn't pull me forward either)...
All thoughts are appreciated!
smiles - holly
|
1844.19 | | CSC32::M_HOEPNER | A Closed Mouth Gathers No Feet | Tue Jan 11 1994 18:40 | 21 |
|
RE:-17
I see where my perspective differs.
I was basing my comments on 'hunter' as in the AHSA HUNTER, AHSA
HUNTER SEAT EQUITATION and AHSA JUMPER divisions.
Very often, AHSA breed divisions demonstrate very different styles
and preferences than the actual AHSA HUNTER... divisions even though
the rules for the breed divisions may refer to the HUNTER division
rules.
Having shown in many different breed divisions, what is considered
'in' for the breed may not win or even place in the HUNTER division
and vice versa. I was at the Arabian National championships and
was stunned and amazed at many of the top finishing 'hunters' in the
hunter pleasure divisions. Some could have gone to an AHSA HUNTER
division show and done well (with a few modifications). But most of
the others went in a manner that would scare the dickens out of me
if they went that way approaching a fence.
|
1844.20 | | XLIB::CHIASSON | Spur of the Moment | Wed Jan 12 1994 08:02 | 45 |
| re: 14
I have shown hunters/jr equitation/adult equitation/dressage for the
past 15 years (not including the 5 years I took off) and showed A horse
shows the last 7 or eight of those years (including last year).
In hack classes at the rated shows, most hunters are shown at the
canter in 2-point. The horse is being judged on how it moves. Riding
in the 2-point makes the horse "look" to be a better mover if the rider
is not sitting on the back. It makes the horse look like he has a more
"flowing" canter...
I started riding hunt seat, switched to dressage for 5 years, then went
back to hunt seat. I was riding at 3rd level dressage when I switched
back. From then on, all of my horses and horses that I rode went much
better - more supple, on the bit, etc...When I show hunters, I ride
with a "professional slouch". It allows me to get off their back and
let them flow freely - especially in a hack class and if I'm going for
points and the horse isn't a "10" mover. But in equitation, I ride
straight and soft. My horse is ALWAYS on the bit and soft and relaxed
and also moving forward but not in the same frame as a hack class.
Last year I was riding jumpers and my instructor got one in the barn
that was really wacko....he was the only horse he'd let me ride
(besides Kiirja's horse in shows). You couldn't put leg on this horse,
had a mouth of steel, and was a neurotic mess. I went back to my
dressage training - actually rode the horse in my dressage saddle. By
the time we sold him at the end of the year, people couldn't believe it
was the same horse. He was still nervous, but that was part of his
personality, he responded to leg, was on the bit, very supple, and doing
flying changes. We did a video of him jumping 4'6" - he was quite an
impressive horse.
I am totally in favor of dressage and hunters and I firmly believe that
my dressage training made all the difference in the world with this
horse. Yes we used "gimmicks" every now and then - but 99.9% of the
work on this horse was basic dressage work.
And yes, one of the hardest things in going back to dressage work is
sitting up straight, though since I had a lot of dressage background it
was easier for me than it is for some people...and yes I do find myself
slouching - but the mirror in the indoor arena fixes that real fast.
Kris
|
1844.21 | ? | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Wed Jan 12 1994 13:23 | 4 |
| Kris,
I'm curious. How does slouching get you off the horse's back? When I
slouch, I feel heavier on their back.
|
1844.22 | | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | I feel a vacation coming on... | Wed Jan 12 1994 15:03 | 20 |
| John,
I think that Kris' slouch is what I call 'schooling horse hunch', where you
have a tendency to tip forward off your seat bones and round your shoulders.
From what I've seen, in practice, there's a great difference between riding
for (horse) performance and riding for equitation. In the performance classes
(hunter hack, hunter over fences, pleasure) you tend to see more of the
'hunched' style, while in the equitation classes, since they're judged on the
person and not the horse, is where you find the 'other' style of hunt seat
riding.
Horses may also be classified as 'equitation horses', which to my mind means
that they are classy movers on their own and are easy enough to sit on that
you don't have to 'make' them perform. They may jump in a slightly flatter
style than the 'hunters'. (note that this is my own interpretation of what
I have seen in my limited exposure to circuit shows)
kathy
|
1844.23 | | XLIB::CHIASSON | Spur of the Moment | Wed Jan 12 1994 15:17 | 11 |
| Thanks Kathy,
I've had a hard time getting in the conference today...
Yes, that is what I mean by slouching....I tend to do it riding in hack
classes where the horse is being judged, but in equitation I "show off"
as my instructor says...
Fortunately Harvey was a great equitation horse and allowed me to do
that....now if I can ever get my knee into riding shape again....maybe
next year...
|
1844.24 | thanks fo rthe clarification | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Wed Jan 12 1994 15:52 | 4 |
| Oh, I see. It's not slouching at all...It's just a light seat with a
"bad habit" thrown on top. I've been there! VS was forever after me
to "stop looking in my prayer book" which was his pet phrase for
hunching the shoulders!
|