I did tell you about reading a book. we had a power outage and only a kerosene lantern so I pulled out a book I have long found to be a difficult read. The Elements of Dressage by Kurd Albrecht Von Zeigner. I have a hard time reading it because of the absolute/ only way ( I am God hear me) tone. Yes, I have no doubt you read it and didn't sense that tone at all.
anyway he stands by the training pyramid but modifies it into a training tree.
this is not intended to be a review or criticism of the book. It is just a story about how I found another successful element to training.
My general method of improving a ride is to take the time to correct the most fundamental error when a mistake is made.
for easy example, the horse spooks at the corner, throws its head up and leaps sideways. my mind immediately analysis the most fundamental error and I use my aids until the error is corrected, then continue to the next until we are at least as good as we were before the error. reading Von Ziegner did not change my plan, but it did inspire me to modify my analysis of success to not be satisfied with as good as it was, but to add, to be as good as it was AND relaxed.
I am repeating this story somewhat, but I am doing so because it had been exceptionally impact full. everything, and I mean everything is better when the goal is relaxation. By relaxation, von Ziegner defines it as the absence of tension in body and mind and I add, while being on the aids. It is not an easy goal. simple obedience is a much easier goal.
when I ask Kimba for something difficult she throws her heart into it with zeal, but tension. trying to keep the zeal in absence of tension has improved her quality of gait self carriage, collection but it takes about 3 times longer.
