Saddle Up April 12

Page 20

Training with Dana Hokana THE IMPORTANCE OF KEEPING YOUR HORSE CENTERED AND BALANCED BETWEEN YOUR LEGS AND REINS

In this article, I will teach you why it is important to keep your horse centered and balanced between your legs and reins. I will help you figure out how to tell or diagnose when your horse is drifting or leaning, and I will give you some tips to fix his leaning or drifting.

I

will also describe what it feels like when your horse is centered and balanced between your reins and legs. Lean can be subtle and vague. It can seem rather unimportant, but I feel that it is very important. If excellence is your goal, then you need all the lean out! It is possible for your horse to appear to track straight but in fact, he is really leaning or drift ing one way or another. Lean can negatively affect anything you do with your horse, but as I train show horses, I see that when a horse is drift ing or leaning his movement especially deteriorates. This happens because when a horse is leaning or drift ing, his energy flow is interrupted or blocked, and excess leg or head and neck action is the result. A horse can lean with just a part of his body by dropping a shoulder or his hip, or he can tip or drop his ribcage and become out of balance. Dropping his body weight forward onto his front end is another form of lean. Knowledge is wonderful, and I want to give you all the knowledge I can! First of all, I want to teach you why it is important to keep your horse centered and balanced between your legs. 1. Leaning or drift ing is a subtle form of a refusal. When a young or green broke horse drifts or leans, it is often the first subtle sign of a refusal. I have seen many young horses drift or lean out of a circle, and then drift towards the gate. Next, they stop at the gate, sull up, and refuse to go forward. The saying, “If you give them an inch, they’ll take a mile,” can often apply to a horse’s leaning. Of course, it also depends upon the horse as to how far they will take it. Some horses go along leaning for years and never become naughty or dangerous, but many will take it to the next level and become very resistant. That small act of disobedience in the form of lean can turn into a big refusal. 2. If your horse is leaning, you won’t have that great ride we all seek. He will not feel as smooth and easy to ride. You may feel like you are begging him to do his job. He may feel unresponsive or dull to your cues. 3. If your horse is drift ing or leaning, it can affect his movement for the show ring because his energy flow is interrupted. His legs will show you that by getting “quick” or appearing “climby.” Many horses will appear to have excessive hock and knee action because their energy flow is interrupted and they are not tracking straight through. Picture this: 20 • Saddle Up • April 2012

if your horse is loping on a right lead, but his body is slightly fading or leaning to the left, or to the outside of the circle, his legs will need to come up and down or he will appear to have more action for him to keep his balance. Rather than his legs moving forward, they will appear to have an up and down motion. Your horse may be leaning only in his hip or possibly his shoulder, but any lean while trying to go forward will deteriorate his movement. 4. When a horse leans, he also tends to drop his back, shoulder, and hips. Horses cannot engage in true collection when they are leaning. How do I tell if my horse is drifting or leaning, and not staying centered and balanced between my legs and reins? 1. One of the best ways to diagnose lean is to ride him on a straight line and release contact on his mouth and see if he fades one way or the other. This sounds very simple but I can’t stress enough how many times I’ve tried this with clients, and even myself, and found my horse fading or veering one way or another. This is lean! 2. If you find that you have to keep correcting him and moving him into position to keep him straight, then he is leaning. 3. If you find that you ride with your hand to the side or you use more of one leg than the other to keep him in position, this is a sign that he is not staying between your reins and legs, and is leaning. 4. He may feel rougher than usual or he may lose definition or crispness to his gaits. This is a sign of lean. 5. He may rock or use his head and neck while he’s moving. If you have ruled out soreness but he still uses his head and neck (some horses will even over bridle and look tight in the head and neck), this may be lean. 6. Have you ever been at a horse show riding in a crowded arena and looked up and saw a rider coming toward you but you had trouble telling if they were going to the inside or the outside of you? They are riding forward looking to the inside, but their horse is heading the other way. I see this all the time and those riders are not realizing that their horse is drifting or leaning to the outside of their circle or track. When a horse travels this way, his energy cannot flow forward through his legs and the quality of his movement will deteriorate. This is another of the many negative results of lean! How do I fix or stop my horse from drifting or leaning? 1. The first step to resolving any problem with your horse, or in life, is to become aware of it! I teach my riders to become mindful, aware riders. It is important to become aware of what your horse is doing underneath you. I want to stress that this is not just a problem that beginners have. I have found that many of the horses that I ride every day have forms of lean that I have missed. This can appear at all levels. You can also see the negative results of a leaning or drift ing horse in every discipline from Western Pleasure, to Reining, Trail, Barrel HCBC 2010 BUSINESS OF THE YEAR


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.