#2 - Contact
DISCLAIMER: I
am not a trainer. These are things that I've learned from lessons, books
that I've read, and personal experience.
Contact and connection are not
necessarily the same thing. Contact is the physical feeling of the reins
in your hand, where the horse is taking the bit from you as much as you are
taking the bit from the horse. Connection is the horse truly moving
forward into your hand and demonstrating energy flowing from behind, through
the back and neck, into your hand. You can have contact and not
connection, but no connection without proper contact.
But we'll talk about contact
today. Once you have a handle on the resistance (which really never goes
away, by the way - all horses, even super trained Kaswyn at 21 years old,
will exhibit resistance due to fatigue, laziness, or the perception that it's
"too hard!" or "I don't wanna!") it's time to establish
proper contact.
I like to think about contact by
imagining the reins are bungee chords. You want your reins to have
pressure on them, but not so much that the bungee chord is stretched to it's
maximum. You also don't want the bungee chord to get slack in it
either. It's all about give and take. You and your horse should be
working TOGETHER to form the connection. He's taking as much as you
are. That connection can be very light or very firm, just as
long as it's the same from both sides.
When you're working to dispel any
resistance, it's hard to think about contact. But that is goal #2 for you
both to achieve. So when you feel like you have a handle on the
resistance, pay close attention to how much you are giving, and what the horse
does when you give.
Some common issues -
1) You give too much, your reins get
slack, and you have to take again, so the horse resists again immediately.
In this case you're just giving too much. At the beginning (like, the
very beginning of the resistance work) this is fine, but now you must refine
your reactions. Give less, just be careful not to go too slowly. Be
quick to respond, just don’t give as much. And begin to finesse your
contact. Immediately after the horse gives in and stops resisting, try and
establish a light contact and just ride that way, changing nothing, for a long
as you can. Praise and love your horse during this, with your voice, to
show that this is what you want. Just try and maintain that contact for
as long as possible. And when he resists again, or breaks the contact,
you fix it again. The longer you can go without fixing something the fast
your can move on to something else. Like true connection.
2) You don't give enough, or fast
enough, and your horse gets tense, and you get tense.
I feel a fight coming on! If you get frustrated, go back to the walk and
regroup yourself mentally and physically. Don't fight. It doesn't
help. Just continue to calmly ask for what you want.
3) Your reins are too long, and
you're pulling, but you run out of room and you can't take up your reins and
you're losing control .. UGH!! It can be really hard, when working
with resistance and contact to find the proper length of rein. When
it's short enough to have a nice contact, then the horse resists and
shortens the neck and you have to pull back and establish connection, your
reins are too long. You feel like you're constantly taking up on and
releasing your reins. Instead of doing this, when your reins seem too
long for just a moment, you can take your hands directly out to the side and
away from your horse. Just bring them straight out to the side. This will increase
the angle from your hand to the bit and make the reins seem shorter. I
know this is scary to take your hands far away from your horse (and the saddle,
and anything you might need to grab onto in an "Oh sh*t!" moment),
but it's quicker and easier than trying to scramble and take up on your
reins.
A note here on hand position.
Your hands, and the contact need not be static, and actually should not
be. The contact should be fluid, a flow and ebb between your horse's
mouth and your hand, like waves on the shore. If he takes a big step and
comes down on your hand, your hands and arms should be elastic enough to go
with him and not have him come down hard on your hand. Conversely, if he
loses his balance and loses connection with your hand, you should be able to
move your hands out to the side and re-establish connection without too much of
a fuss. It's ok to come out of position in these cases, just strive to
return to proper position once you have done what you need to do.
Lastly, remember that your horse's
mouth is sensitive. Sure, he may jerk the reins out of your hands,
but that's a choice he is making with a known price. Like something he's
doing to himself. If you jerk on his mouth constantly it's just not nice,
since it's something you're doing to him. Dressage is about harmony,
which means working together. Respect his mouth and you'll earn his
respect.
So, work on elastic contact,
remember it's ok to come out of position, and be kind to your horse's
mouth.
Shoot me a comment (or slam me, if
you feel the need) or email me at dressagemomblog@yahoo.com
if you have questions or something you wish to say privately.
2 comments:
well said! Thank you!
You've been watching us. :) Contact is so hard to achieve when pony is bouncing his head all over the place. But when we get it right, it feels lovely - all 3 strides of it!
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