Classical Riding is..... (by Sue Morris) What would your first answer be? The Spanish Riding School of Vienna? The Cadre Noir at Saumur perhaps? Possibly the riding seen on the Iberian peninsula with Andalusians and Lusitanos? Of course you would be right in naming all these, but the answer that I'm looking for is: "Classical Riding is correct riding". It is how we really should ride every time we get on a horse. It is Horsemanship - not just knowing how to ride, but all round knowledge of the horse as a species - its psychology and physiology. Classical Riding works because it has stood the the test of time. It works without fear or force and most definitely without gadgets. It's working with, never against, the horse. It is opening the lines of communication between horse and rider, listening to the horse, of being very aware of how every move you make means something to thehorse, of first being able to ask yourself ?what did I do that made the horse do that?? when you didn't get the response you were looking for. There is nothing about ?making him do it?. The responsibility lies with you, the rider, to make things comfortable for the horse. That doesn't mean you won't meet resistance or evasion or that you can't use discipline to counter them; the results are achieved through co-operation not coercion. Classical riding is foremost concerned with the the acquisition of a classical seat - this is a balanced, deep and feeling seat. In this context ?seat? includes the
seat bones, pubic arch, thighs, lower back and very importantly the
abdominal muscles. Classical riders develop wonderfullylight, ?The hands receive what the leg puts into them - no more, no less? - Dr Thomas Ritter. The emphasis is placed on you, the rider, to learn about your own body and howeven slight variations in the way you hold yourself affect the way the horse moves beneath you. How can you expect your horse to achieve self-carriage if you're not in self-carriage yourself? In Classical Riding much is made of the position of the pelvis and seat bones and the use of lumbar and abdominal muscles. You learn that you don't follow the horse's movement you lead it and to be able to lead it you have to know that: ?To be an aid, the seat or weight effect of the rider must not only be correct; it has to occur at the right moment? - Brig Gen. Albrecht, former Director of the Spanish Riding School). ?One of the problems is that many riders
pay lip service to some of the classical principles, but they interpret
them incorrectly, so the outcome looks nothing like a classically correctly
trained horse and rider. In other cases, they admit to deviating from
classical principles, because "modern research shows ..."
or "it is not applicable for our modern horses...", or something
like that, as if the equine species had mutated in some significant,
fundamental way from the horses the Old What to Look for in a Classical Trainer Why Ride Classically? << Regresar |