HALT, THE FORGOTTEN MOVEMENT

The halt on centreline at the beginning and end of every dressage test is an important opportunity to make good first and last impressions on the judge. The horse doesn’t need to be fancy or have extravagant gaits to get a very high mark for the halt. It is generally seen only from the front, since at most competitions there is just one judge at C.

The halt on centreline is, in my experience as a coach, an often-neglected movement that riders don’t practice enough. Given that it’s both an important movement and one in which a high mark is always possible, the halt on centreline should be a regular part of any training program.

STRATEGIES FOR SUCCESS

One of the first pieces of advice I give my clients is to identify which is the horse’s straighter side. It is easier to make the turn onto centreline in the direction that the horse bends more easily, so I tell riders to enter from that direction in order to make that first turn as easy as possible. If the horse bends more easily to the left, the rider should come from the left onto centre line. If the horse is relatively equal on both sides, I then look to the direction the horse will turn when it reaches C and tell the rider to enter from the same direction as that of the turn at C. If the test requires the horse to track right at C, then the rider with a fairly equal-sided horse should enter from the right.

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