On Tuesday morning, my husband had a lesson. I asked the trainer to set up a course and talk to my husband about how to do hunter courses and then try to get him around a course. One of his bad habits is stopping if anything goes wrong. If Shasta stumbles slightly in the deep dirt at the top end of the arena, he’ll go down to a walk, walk around for a minute, go back to the beginning of the exercise and then restart. This happens for all sorts of things: break from canter, had an argument about speed, need to fix a stirrup, etc. He can’t do this at a show; he needs to just keep going and finish.
He has also never been to a show or done hunters so he didn’t know things like circling at the beginning so I had her explain those and have him practice them.
Of course, our entire arena has like 10 poles in it and fewer standards so making a course means some of the jumps have to be a bit creative:
Cones and planters jump |
Planter jump complete with broken ground line pole |
We did get a bit side-tracked from the whole course jumping thing by the discovery that my husband cannot tell what lead he’s on when cantering. I always thought he just wasn’t looking, but apparently he cannot tell by looking. He can only tell if she feels off balance around a turn. But Shasta can do a lovely counter canter so that’s not a good method.
I can usually feel it, but Tristan doesn't have the smoothest canter in the world. There are days when I do have to glance down to make sure if I don't feel it in a stride or two.
I look at shoulders. I would be off course all the time personally so I can't blame him there. 😉
I can feel it, but I also have a bad habit of looking down which my trainer gets after me about.
Feeling it just takes time! My dressage trainer had this beautifully balanced Trakehner gelding who would very occasionally pick up the wrong lead; she had trouble telling if he was on the incorrect lead even if she glanced at his shoulders! (I had the same problem when I rode him!)
Does your husband typically ride in a half-seat at the canter? Sometimes that makes it more difficult to learn the 'feel' of the lead. If he does, maybe he could try really sitting down deep in the saddle (maybe without stirrups or in a dressage saddle?). When he's sitting, his inside hip will feel like it's slightly ahead of his outside hip- not so much as to be totally crooked, but just a little bit.
Good luck! It's a hard concept to grasp and an even harder one to teach!
I've gone off course too, but his "course" had 4 jumps at the time.
I like the without stirrups idea and the hip ideas. I will have him try this.
I look down occasionally too; I'm not perfect either.
From riding her, I know Shasta is hard to feel it on because she's so smooth.