Steffen Peters teaches a session with a Friesian cross 15 year old mare schooling PSG. The rider expresses concern with the mare losing activity and jump and a lack of responsiveness to the aids for the change due to the quality of the canter. Steffen points out that it is really an issue of how the mare listens to the riders aids each time they are used. He asks her to warm up in all three gaits and to figure out what frame she lets go in so the mare cant use her topline against the rider. She starts out quick in the tempo and not quite engaged enough behind. He helps her adjust the curb chain and noseband. When the walk is too quick he asks for a halt during which she finds the frame where the horse stretches. They show a better walk with more relaxation and swing in the back. As they go to the canter they keep her round to help with her bracing. When she has a bit of a problem collecting the canter they go to the walk and do a large walk pirouette. When she tightens they counter flex making it more of a leg yield, then bend when she drops her neck a bit. Coupled with a better response off her outside leg this exercise helps her engage her hindquarters and drop her neck. They go to the canter and repeat the exercise.
Up Next in Prix St. Georges
-
Clearly on the Aids PSG | Steffen Pet...
They reverse direction and continue with the walk pirouette. Steffen asks to ride the horse ( Steffen removes his microphone before he gets on. The rider wears it later as she watches him ride.) He begins by repeating the same exercise at the walk, using his leg for a short push rather than a ki...
-
Clearly on the Aids PSG | Steffen Pet...
The rider now remounts, and Steffen clarifies that when she pushes with the spur it needs to mean more to the mare. When she goes to the canter pirouette she shows a much better collection and when she breaks to the trot Steffen encourages her to make a bigger correction. He asks them to extend ...
-
Making Critical Improvements in the G...
Cesar Torrente judges a Prix St-Georges test, and we hear his scoring as it is ridden.