A chilled Filly

Friday 25 January 2013

Not riding is an opportunity not a negative

The snow is still here, but there is hopes of a thaw tomorrow.
I've continued to play with Filly however and this period of enforced ground work has actually not been a bad thing.
To start with, I find it is easier to build rapport from the ground, and that has improved to a high standard again. For example today I played with Filly at liberty in a small indoor school whilst Ritchie played with Bonitao online. Ritchie was getting Bonitao to do some pretty snappy transitions from walk to canter, but even then Filly stayed with me and we continued our work. Even when that work was canter circles at liberty.
The aim remains to improve the hind quarter porcupine yields (hqpy )and maintain the responsibilities on the circle.
The hqpy have improved a great deal. Filly will now step away from the pressure nice and softly, and with a good facial expression, but still with a tail swish. It is the tail swish I would like her to get over so that I can say they are becoming good. Until then I will continue to work on them everyday. During this training I found the best position to be in was with my back towards her sides and then just gently use the back of my hand to apply the pressure. This overcame a lot of her opposition to the pressure.
I think that turning my back on her immediately lessened the emotional pressure, and using the back of my hand (i.e fist) it feels less like a claw and gives a softer feel. I am now gradually introducing turning my body to face her, but it is a case of approach and retreat to get her confidence.
As for the responsibilities, they are getting pretty good. Given that we had the distraction of Bonitao also cantering around online Filly still managed a very nice steady 3 laps of canter at liberty on both reins. That shows a marked improvement in her concentration over the last week or so. I am hoping it will translate into more responsiveness and forwards when we get to ride again.

It puzzles me how few riders takes the opportunity to use this non-riding time to work on the ground skills with their horses. Some do take there horses in the school to lunge them to stretch their legs from the weather enforced box rest. But they do not use the time they are spending with their horses anyway to improve their ground work and ultimately their riding. Besides it's fun !

Tuesday 22 January 2013

Snow stops play

Little to say at the moment. The recent snow in the UK has made playing with horses outdoors impossible for us. The outdoor school is frozen and covered and the fields are also in a bad state.
The snag is that with 40 horses at the yard the indoor school, which is small, is heavily used and so difficult to get training time in.
I have still managed to get some stuff done with Filly. Quite a lot of liberty when the school is empty, and online work when not. This enforced non-riding period has allowed me to polish up all those ground work skills that I have been neglecting. For example we have been practising lots of sideways towards me in preparation for using a fence or mounting block to mount from.
I have also been working on making lowering the head much lighter. I can now ask her to lower her head at liberty and then keep it down as I lightly rest my arm on her neck. This is just a basic follow the feel exercise which translates into lighter rein cues when riding and lighter lead rope when leading.
I have also been working on the circling game to just improve her maintenance of her responsibilities. Again this should lead to lighter riding. If she maintains gait, maintains direction and looks where she is going I have the ultimate in lightness as I don't need to use any cues at all unless I want to change something.
 

Friday 11 January 2013

Muddy Filly

Filly hates to get muddy. I have never ever seen her roll in a field. In the nice clean sand indoor school she loves to roll, it is the highlight of her day. But in mud, never.
I was a little perturbed therfore on arriving at the yard yesterday to find her legs and belly covered in sticky, wet mud. She hadn't rolled apparently, but she had careered around the field so much that she had splashed her lower half with a thick coating. It was so sticky and wet that there was no question of cleaning her enough to be able to put a saddle on, and given the weather she would not have dried if I had washed her.
If she thought this was a clever way to get out of work, she had forgotten about ground work. So off to the outdoor school we went.
We started at liberty. As soon as I took off her halter she spotted a jump wing that was set up and wandered over to investigate. Never knock the curiosity out of a young horse, so I waited to see what she would do. After a good sniff she decided that practising sideways over it would be a great idea. With no prompting from me she carefully positioned herself and then stepped sideways until it was under her belly. The thing was so tall there was only one part of her belly it would fit under, as you can see from the photo. I was very surprised but happy to see her play and curiosity was this strong.
The rest of the session was just pretty normal stuff so I won't bore you with the details. Suffice to say by the end of the session she was dry enough for me to get very dusty scraping all the dried mud off :(


Wednesday 9 January 2013

Cantering Filly

A lovely ride on Filly today. A perfect day for it as well, clear and still.
I started with the prepare to ride being done at liberty. Why ? It just felt right, and it was a change of routine which for a horse like Filly keeps her mind engaged.
Even though it was a liberty we still worked on the same things. It's just like preparing online, no difference, there just happens to be no rope attached. James Roberts always made the point that liberty done for the purpose of impressing friends looks horrible, done with a purpose and it is a thing of beauty.
The purpose today was to play the circling game with no interference on her head so that she could really think forwards and not be inhibited by the halter and lead rope flapping around. I was after 3 laps of maintain gait, maintain direction and look where you are going at walk, trot and canter.
To be honest it was very easy. Even though we were in the large outdoor school she never left me. The circles were, if anything, a little too small and I had to use the stick and string to gently drive her onto a larger circle. Once she had completed the required 3 laps, with quality, a slight dip of my head and she turned sharply towards me and happily trotted over. Of course each session took more than 3 laps as the count starts again if I have to correct her at all, but mostly it was fewer than 6 laps in total.
I then saddled her up and got her moving around a little more online to let her blow out so I could cinch the girth up to riding tightness. On that subject it amazes me the number of folks who get on a horse and ride it around before they have the girth at the correct tightness. As the horse moves initially they deflate a lot, the net result is that many people are spending at least a proportion of the ride with a loose girth. Do this a few hundred times and it is inevitable that one day they will spook with a loose girth, the saddle will roll and they will come off, leaving a frightened horse with a saddle dangling under its' belly.
Once riding she was fairly good, but seemed to lack forwards so I decided that canter was probably the solution. I have done very little cantering on her to date as we waited for her to get a little stronger, but she has toughened up nicely so I felt I could risk it. The first canter took a little bit to get her going but only maybe ten strides or so. I don't think she could believe that I was actually asking for canter ! Once going it took a while to get in tune with her gait. Due to the conformation issues all her gaits are a little odd. There seems to be an extra little bounce in canter. Once I finally "got it", much to Fillys' relieve, it was actually very comfortable. Given that she is supposed to be a race horse I have to say that her canter is really gentle and sweet. No rushing, just a really relaxed gait.
The stop is, however, amazing. The cue to stop is to let out a deep breath and relax in the body. The first attempt and I felt I was going to fall off forwards. Two strides from canter to a dead stop. Fantastic. They were not all that good but that first one showed what she could do.
Once we had cantered for around 5 minutes total I walked her off for a while by riding alongside another horse and chatting to the owner. All good for her confidence around other horses. Then I dismounted.
I needed to clear some cones I had set up to do the weave pattern at the start of the ride. Filly didn't look as though she was going anywhere so I just let her go. She followed me around the school as I tidied up, and all the time the other rider was riding around looking in amazement. "Just like a pet dog" she said and she was right. I have to say she is becoming a really confident calm horse now, one that I am proud to own.

Tuesday 1 January 2013

Another hack out

A lovely if slightly cold day today. Ritchie and I decided we had to get Bonitao and Filly off the yard for a short hack along the local lanes.

All the usual prepare to ride was done, which showed Filly to be in a very mellow today. We prepared as we had played the last few days with more work on maintaining responsibilities on the circle and sideways over a pole and cones using porcupine pressure. Both showed considerable improvement.

Of course once on board the prepare to ride was put to good use. We played corner game at walk which she really understands now and I hardly had to direct her at all.

At trot I am still being very uncritical other than she must maintain gait. The order of the responsibilities of the horse is important so getting her to maintain gait first is the correct thing to do. As for direction I play "tit for tat" letting her choose where to go for a while, and then taking her idea and modifying it with my idea as to where to go next. Doing this, and with lots of stroking and reassurance, we trotted for a fair time with no head tossing at all. A great leap forward. No I have to gently increase my ideas as to direction compared to hers. Slowly, with her hardly noticing, I will be directing her more and more. No fight, just persuasion.

After about 15 minutes in the school we left and went for a walk. She happily helped me open the gate to the school, thus giving the earlier practised sideways a purpose.
The hack was fun, but she was again pretty tense. With lots for reassurance and stroking she held it together very well. The few spooks she had were all of one step, or less.
She was very forward in the walk leaving poor Bonitao far behind. He regularly had to trot to keep up, and he is a horse who prefers to be in front. We figured he thinks it is too much effort to stay in front of Filly so plods along behind.

Sideways Porcupine

Only groundwork with Filly recently as I haven't felt well enough to ride. Hopefully today will be different though.

In lieu of riding I have been going back to basics a bit with the groundwork. For example Filly had forgotten her responsibilities on the circle of maintain gait, maintain direction and looking where she is going. She was also still very defensive about steady (porcupine) pressure on her sides to get her to move away.
First the circling game. Of course we only use circles when doing groundwork as we can't move fast enough to keep up if we do not. In addition the leader of a herd of horses tends to be the one who moves their feet least and by circling we can stand still and make the horse move a lot. However the lessons learned on the circle will translate into more linear patterns when ridden, especially the responsibilities.
My aim was to get two laps at forward walk, forward trot and forward canter with no interference from me once the direction and gait had been set. This is an advancement of the basic circling game where only the gait matters. Here I wanted quality of gait as well. Should I have to remind her of the need to maintain the desired gait the circle count reset and she still had to do two circles to get the reward of a rest. Thus each session consisted of many more circles than just two, but as soon as two good quality circles where achieved she got to rest.
The game for her was to figure out what she had to do to make sure I did not give her a cue and for how long she had to do it. This is different from normal lunging a horse where they are constantly reminded what to do. This develops them physically but not mentally.
It did not take too long to get the desired circles and so I can build now from 2 to a goal of 6 circles with no interference.

As for porcupine sideways we had, over several sessions, got to the point where she was beginning to accept the pressure and move lightly off it. But it was still with some attitude. Now she was at least partly thinking about things during the porcupine game I could add obstacles to negotiate as I directed her with finger tip pressure. The obstacle yesterday was a pole on the ground with a cone at each end, and the task was to go along the pole sideways with the pole under her belly. This put a purpose to being manoeuvred about with porcupine pressure. After four or five goes she suddenly "got it" and the resistance largely melted away and we got some really nice sideways. Lots of licking, chewing and even yawning from her showed she was finally relaxing to the idea.