Training the canter-trot transition is essentially the same throughout the horse’s training, but as horses develop the collection necessary for canter-walk or canter-halt transitions, what becomes important is differentiating your aids for the canter-trot. Problems with the canter-trot transition can arise as the horse develops the collection in the canter; the key to prevention is correct training of the aids for canter-trot, as well as reinforcement of that transition throughout the horse’s career.

From the knee

My horses learn from the very beginning in the canter that when I relax their backs a little and then close my knees, they are to drop into a trot and keep thinking “forward.” Closing your knee into a downward transition is a very basic signal that a three-year-old horse will understand. If your knee is open and your leg is relaxed and draped on the horse, the horse knows to go forward. If you close your knee against the horse, it will respond by stopping or slowing down.

Once horses learn to collect and perform canter-walk transitions and eventually canter pirouettes, it’s important that they continue to understand the difference in aids for the canter-trot transition. For canter-walk or canter-halt I think of making the horse sit into it, while for canter-trot I think about making the horse relax into it. In the grand prix test, you have the canter pirouettes – the most collected of all the canter exercises – almost immediately followed by a trot transition. By relaxing your seat and opening the thigh and then closing your knee, you are telling the horse to relax in its back and go forward into the trot. I always relax my seat and thigh a little bit before closing the knee for the trot. As long as I continue to ride the trot transition slightly differently than the walk or halt transition, my horses learn to recognize the distinction. They know that when I relax my seat and let them out of the collection, they can expect a possible canter-trot transition.

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