Oh dang, jingles for Laddie!
StraightForward wrote:Annabelle:
I have a clinic next weekend, and then my instructor will be in town the following weekend. After that, I'm thinking I'll give her a couple weeks off from riding, and then keep her workload a little lighter through December. Planning to start long lining her once a week or so. I'm sure I'll get plenty of homework after the clinic and lessons, guessing it will all be around suppleness and straightness.
Tesla - Just ride consistently and focus on getting her reliably forward. Cantering will be dependent on what the weather does to the outdoor since the indoor is pretty small for a big green bean.
Me - keep up the running and work on my core, which I think will need to get a little stronger to get Annabelle to the next level.
Well, I kept running, so that's something!
Annabelle did well in the clinic, and has been steadily improving. She never did get her break because the weather has been mostly good, and my regular instructor has been here a few times as well. I wanted to take lessons as much as possible never knowing when covid might bring it to a screeching halt. Well, she did get three days off this week since she apparently whacked her nose on something and it's now swollen right where the noseband goes. I did finally long line today, so that was maybe 2x in 2 months. She is muscling up so much that she is outgrowing her blankets, and I can see the difference in pics from August and December. The lateral work is improving, and collection is almost within reach.
Tesla - I had adjust my approach with her a few times. We have cantered under saddle just a little, but it had the feel of an uncoordinated giraffe, and she tended to want to canter left lead going to the right, so not much came of that. The big thing though, we got past a certain point of diceyness with the riding where I feel much more confident when I'm in the saddle and feel like I can *ride* her a bit, rather than just praying everything goes OK.

Now we're having another go at lunging, and having some success with double-lunging combined with in-hand work and SureFoot pads to get her thinking of her balance. Seeing how genuinely difficult she finds cantering to the right, I'm convinced that working on it from the ground first is the right way to go. We also haven't made it off property since we went backwards a bit on trailer loading and are revisiting that.