Geoff Teall – 2’6” to 2’9” – Jumping a Short Course
Hunters/Equitation
•
17m
Geoff Teall sets a course for the clinic riders and wants them to make the decisions of where and when they need to stop in order to bring their horses back. The pace should stay about the same and the lines should stay straight, but the choice as to what to do next will come after the jump.
Up Next in Hunters/Equitation
-
Geoff Teall – 2’6” to 2’9” – Warm-...
Riders in the Geoff Teall clinic continue in a slow hand-gallop and work toward establishing the canter needed to jump. The riders need to be in a half-seat with balance in the legs while the hands are steady and even. They fine-tune their positions on the flat so they are better prepared to star...
-
Geoff Teall – 2’6” to 2’9” – Warm-up ...
Geoff Teall has the horses start in a posting trot, which he says is a good gait to get a read on how the horses feel that day. The horses have to be willing to carry the riders in a relaxed, forward manner. Both horses and riders should be comfortable working at the pace needed to jump.
-
Geoff Teall – 2’ to 2’3” – Jumping a ...
The clinic riders repeat the course adding small details, such as a quicker pace or shorter reins, to make the rounds even smoother. At the end of the session, Geoff Teall has the riders talk about what they learned over the three days.