It's a standard movement in FEI dressage tests: extended canter across the diagonal with a flying change at the letter at the end.
Randy Roy is a senior international judge and course designer. He is the author of nine books, including the most recent, Heads Up! An Everyday Guide For You and Your Horse. He owns and operates Hunters Glen show stable in King, ON, with his daughter, Ryan Roy.
This underrated movement, critical to equitation classes and important in everyday training, is not an exercise of strength, but rather accuracy of the aids.
Canadian Eventing Team member Diana Burnett's early experiences on horseback involved accompanying her parents on field hunt meets, galloping over large expanses of rural terrain in spring or fall after a pack of foxhounds in full cry.
The transition from canter to trot is one of the only movements that is in both the training level test 1 and the grand prix test.
Randy Roy is a senior international judge, course designer and author. He owns and operates Hunters Glen Show Stable in King, ON, with his daughter, Ryan Roy.
As commonly used in daily training as it is, the shoulder-in is a notoriously difficult movement in which to achieve a high mark.
Riding without stirrups is one exercise that will significantly improve your riding ability. Avoided by many due to its tendency to make even the fittest athlete sweat and be sore the next day, it is one whose payoff is worth tenfold what you are willing to endure.
According to Canadian Eventing Team member Diana Burnett, cross-country courses used to be largely straightforward galloping tracks. However, modern courses now incorporate many turns and knowing how to ride them properly is an important skill.
Like the pyramids of Egypt and the caramel in the Caramilk bar, accurately determining a young horse's performance potential is one of the great mysteries of the world.