Success as an FEI Junior and Young Rider developed into a senior career that saw Chris von Martels on the Canadian Dressage Team shortlist in 2011. At the 2014 CDIO Nations’ Cup in Wellington, FL, this February, Chris and his horse, Zilverstar, were members of Canada’s silver medal-winning team. A long-time student of Canadian Olympian Ashley Holzer, Chris has also trained in Europe with Dutch super-star Anky Van Grunsven. Chris and his wife, Lisa, run Von Martels Dressage Inc., a training and sales facility in Ridgetown, ON, and divide their time between there and Wellington, FL.

No matter which discipline you ride, transitions represent an essential component. “From the moment I get on a horse to the moment I get off, I incorporate transitions,”says Chris von Martels. While true for all riders, Chris stresses the role that transitions play, from the first lessons in submission for a young horse, to developing the strength that a grand prix horse needs in order to perform a canter pirouette. Transitions also account for a large proportion of the marks in competition: of the 14 movements in training level test 1, eight of them contain transitions between gaits; in the grand prix special, more than a third of the marks are based wholly or in part on transitions.

As a trainer, Chris focuses primarily on the basics, rather than schooling movements or using specific geometric figures. “I’m obsessed with the basic work,” he says. “I believe if your basics are good, you can execute all the movements well. You don’t improve the half-pass by doing 50 half-passes.” There are some transitions that he uses more frequently than others, such as trot-canter. Of all the downward transitions between gaits, only one is found at both training level and grand prix: the transition from canter to trot. “I believe this is one of the most difficult transitions, which is why it’s in the FEI tests,” says Chris, who incorporates frequent canter-trot transitions into his daily work with every horse he rides. Chris also uses transitions forward-and-back within the gait, which serves multiple purposes, including building the strength and endurance that the horse needs for more advanced work.

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