Kirby's Keeper wrote:I agree with that quote SF. What I think is happening is that in putting your left leg back to guard against Tesla swinging her butt left, you aren't just moving your left leg from the hip but you are moving the whole hip back and overbalancing on the left side of the saddle. We all have some pelvic asymmetry. As a Bowen Therapist I have become more aware of these issues and how they influence how we ride. The students I teach are all older adult amateurs. Asking them to rotate their upper body from the waist to ride a bended line wasn't getting the result. When I got them to realign their pelvis they immediately got results. It only takes an adjustment of 1/2 inch or less with each hip to make a huge difference.
I thought about this riding my other horse today. I was in a jumping saddle, so it might be slightly different in a dressage saddle, but both horses tend to fall in on the right shoulder, and I do tend to go over to the left to compensate, however, I think my seatbone is sliding more to the left rather than back, and the correction is more inside knee to keep the shoulders over and under me, as well as keeping my back right ribs more pulled together so my left front rib doesn't collapse in.
Rye, this horse is very green and doesn't know much about contact, so there really isn't a contact to throw away and trying to take contact in that moment would ensure that she stopped. However, the lunging in side reins is working out really well, and I'm optimistic that it will transfer into the riding well. I remember you saying that you don't work with young horses, so I'm not sure if you've ridden a horse through this stage?
Khall and SueB, I am grateful that Tesla is not as explody as Rip and Tio!
Last night I re-watched the video from when I took a lesson on her a couple weeks ago, when I *thought* we had put the stopping behind us. She was still a little sticky, but there weren't any stops, and I was not riding any differently as far as I could tell. We pushed her a little more in the lesson and in the two or so rides afterwards, then the stopping started again, I guess because the work got a little harder? Will do a few more lunging sessions and try riding again this weekend and see if I can implement some of these suggestions.