Dressage Is Not A Discipline

December 21, 2009 at 1:59 pm  ·  1 Comment
Categories: Classical Riding, Competition, Dressage, Jumping, Riding, Suppleness, The Training Scale, Training
Tags: , , ,

In the past, when people found out that I rode horses, the first question I would get was “What kind of riding do you do??” and my usual response would be “dressage”. Then I changed it to “dressage and jumping” because if you just say dressage, for some weird reason everyone assumes you do a few select things on a few select (and usually fancy) horses and everything else is out of your range of abilities. Which is strange, because correct, classical dressage puts you into the position to participate in pretty much any type of riding. But it was sort of true – mostly I rode in a dressage saddle, and sometimes I jumped in a close contact saddle. And sometimes I even jumped in a dressage saddle (did you gasp? :-P ). But I did lots of other things that the layman wouldn’t even think to associate with “dressage”. The image of dressage has become that rider at the Olympics, all decked out in the right outfit, riding a multi-million dollar horse, having trained for years and years for this moment. But that image is only the tip of the iceberg, a tiny piece of the truth. Unfortunately it seems to put the average rider out of reach.

Later on, as I acquired more knowledge about certain things supposed “dressage riders” were doing out there in the world, I stopped answering the question as to what kind of riding I frequented with “dressage and jumping” and simply said “English”. If elaboration was called for, then I would say “dressage and jumping” still…but it made me uncomfortable. I didn’t want anyone to think I did what I saw a lot of riders do who claimed to “ride dressage”. It was just embarrassing. And you don’t even have to get into serious topics in the equestrian world like rollkur. For example, I recently witnessed a woman, who loudly proclaims to be a “dressage rider”, get extremely upset with her horse after the mare refused to stand still and allow her to shut the gate after exiting the arena. The horse apparently took a few steps forward, and this woman tried to get the horse to back up to where she felt she should be…and when the horse refused she pulled and pulled and used her entire body weight to pull on both reins. The horse braced herself and refused to move. The lady then continued pulling and proceeded to kick and kick and kick…with spurs. And then used her whip on the horse’s chest with every ounce of her strength. The horse at this point kind of half-reared, and still refused to go backwards. All this time, the lady is not only out of control physically, but emotionally she is a wreck. I swear, this must have gone on for 20 mintues. If it had been my place rectify the situation, believe me, I would have done it. Unfortunately it was not, and I had to witness this with my blood boiling and threatening to blow the top of my head off. In my mind I saw myself running over, throwing the fit the horse probably would have liked to throw, and screaming “Don’t you EVER tell anyone you do dressage!!” But…that wasn’t really a possibility. And so…this is a definite dilemma. I really don’t want to be associated with that and I definitely don’t want some to-be or novice rider seeing that and thinking that’s ok. Because yes, “dressage” is and should be so much more than just what you do in the arena. It’s everything about how you treat your horse.

“If training has not made a horse more beautiful, nobler in carriage, more attentive in his behavior, revealing pleasure in his accomplishment, then he has not truly been schooled in dressage.” ~ Col. Handler

So why has dressage become categorized as a discipline, a mere subset in the sport of riding, when it is the basics to all riding? One of the reasons I have come up with is because there are dressage shows. So people think, “Well I don’t ride dressage so I can’t show at those shows”. Not exactly. What I usually tell people if I have the golden opportunity to explain is that dressage is just French for training and they should try to think of someone who only “rides dressage” as being like someone who works out just for fitness’s sake. Not for any certain sport, just to be the best human being they can be. Theoretically, if that very fit person chose to do a sport they would have a clear advantage over their unfit counterparts. So dressage is riding for riding’s sake, making the horse the best athlete he can be and therefore expanding his options. I tell people that when you go to a dressage show, what you are really doing is showing how well your horse is trained at the level at which you’re competing. The qualities dressage judges look for are not specific to dressage at all. Would a western or hunter jumper rider ever claim that things like suppleness, flexibility, and accuracy aren’t important to them? Of course not. So if they are training correctly they are doing dressage without even knowing it. It’s just correct training. And riding is always training because it is darn near impossible to ride a horse and not influence the horse. All influence on the horse is training, whether it is good or bad, correct or incorrect.

The coolest thing would be to see an influx of riders who typically only go to other types of shows start to show up at dressage shows to gauge their training.

The real shame here is that a lot of horses are missing out. Every horse deserves the chance to be trained correctly and to be the best he can be. If dressage weren’t considered an area to specialize in, and instead were the basics to which everyone learned to ride and then chose what “discipline” to show in or what saddle to ride in, or what-have-you…how many horses would be better off? Not to mention the riders. This is one reason why I love K.A. von Ziegner’s version of the training scale in Elements Of Dressage: A Guide To Training The Young Horse so much. He has a “Training Tree” where the trunk contains the scale and the leaves are the discipline in which the horse competes after he has been trained according to the scale. Dressage, Jumping, and Eventing are up there. And so maybe what we should really be calling dressage is the higher levels (4th Level onwards perhaps?), where horses move onto after receiving correct basic training. And so all of us sub-double-bridle classical dressage riders would instead tell people “I just ride…correctly…but someday I hope to do dressage” – ha!

I would really love to tell people “I ride dressage” and have them understand what I really mean…but I don’t think that’s going to happen anytime soon. So nowadays, when I am asked what type of riding I do, I say “Classical Riding”. And I do it because 99.9% of the time the person will say, “Huh…what’s that?

Then I get to say: “I’m so glad you asked…” :-)

I would really love to hear your thoughts on this!

1 Comment

What It Means To Me

December 19, 2009 at 4:22 pm  ·  5 Comments
Categories: Bits, Classical Riding, The Training Scale
Tags: , , ,

After my brief intro, I want to put a more personalized spin on all this classical stuff. You can say “classical riding is correct riding” until you’re blue in the face, but it still doesn’t help you until you know what correct riding is.

Here is what classical riding has come to mean to me:

1. It means you follow the training scale. All the time. There are several slightly different versions, which I will go into depth on later. Even when you feel like you can do things a faster way, you need to remember that this is the fastest way. If you don’t have time to do something right, you must have time to do it over. And guess what? It takes a heck of a lot longer to re-train than it does to train correctly in the first place.

2. You don’t pull or yank on the reins. This is a tough one, because inevitably after reading this you will have a life-threatening emergency, be at a dead gallop heading towards the edge of a cliff, or just plain scared. I have been as guilty as anyone of the last one…and I am really hoping that as I progress as a rider, my instinctual response to something like a bolt or spook can be to just relax and calmly help the horse recover. Besides situations involving large amounts of adrenaline, pulling back on the reins in general blocks the action of the hind legs and creates tension – two things that go in the opposite direction of progress.

3. You use the softest bit possible. Translation: You use a soft bit – it’s always possible. The bit is not a brake, it’s not a getting-the-head-down device, it’s not a punishment. It’s a method of communication, a fine-tuning of the energy created from the hind end, and your horse should LOVE IT. Someday I will have to post a video of my Mom standing next to her horse with the bridle – he actually tries to bridle himself when he sees his bridle and if he could walk around with his bit in his mouth like a pacifier, he would. He loves it.

4. You understand that all good riding comes from the seat, and the classical seat is something that takes a long time to develop and must be maintained. You work at it. The lunge line is a great place to start if you have somebody willing to help you.

5. You don’t use force. You don’t beat the crap out of your horse for any reason, and you don’t use gadgets. (Gadgets don’t include the use of the dressage whip and spurs – when used correctly they can be useful aids.) For example, I used to use running/draw reins occasionally…but the more I read, the more I realized it wasn’t such a hot idea. You shouldn’t use a gadget to compensate for your lack of riding ability, and if you had the riding ability you wouldn’t use it. On the other hand if you’re using a gadget to compensate for your horse, then you need to back up and start following the training scale again; if you horse can’t perform the way you want without the gadget, then he isn’t ready for what you are asking. If you ride correctly (from back to front), you will get there.

6. The horse is your training calendar. Sometimes things may seem to be going unbearably slow, but this doesn’t mean you start skipping steps or using force. If things are going slow, they are going slow for a reason. Find the reason! It might be a physical injury, certain muscles might need more time to develop, and it might even be you. Whatever it is, take the time to try to figure it out, and never stray from the training scale.

7. The horse is innocent. Always. Horses are products of how humans have treated them. They don’t have hidden agendas and secret plots to get us when we’re not looking. Behavior is functional and always has a reason. So many times I hear things like “I’m doing everything right, my horse just has a mind of his own”. You have to be willing to accept responsibility for your riding and for your horse. Or don’t ride that horse.

8. Be fit! This is a quote by Ernst Hoyos from the book Dressage Masters: Techniques and Philosophies of Four Legendary Trainers: “A rider should be very fit. His condition should be good enough that he can always help the horse to perform better. He should be able to ride double the amount that is required. A tired rider makes a lot of mistakes. He becomes a heavy burden for the horse to carry.” Enough said.

9. Read – a lot! Seeking out knowledge is one of the easiest and best things you can do to help yourself ride your horse better. Find the best books, articles, and magazines and get crackin’. To help you out, I’ve compiled a list of books that I really like – click on the Read tab to check them out.

10. See the whole picture, and make sure your horse gets to be a horse. A happy and healthy horse is a much more willing partner. This can mean anything from making sure he is getting adequate nutrition and turn out time to checking that his tack is fitting correctly. It’s important to learn about equine physiology and psychology as well so you can be sure you are safeguarding your horse’s well-being to the utmost.

That’s what it means to me. What does it mean to you?

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