Leslie Morse Clinic Notes
Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2023 2:23 am
Hope something here is helpful to others!
Piaffe (ground assist to rider on a ~4th level horse) helpful to start on a circle, don't overbend. This helps with diagonalization. Don't overbend - ride forward into piaffe. Too many people make the piaffe about coming backwards.
Canter/FC - make sure to keep the neck forward and out, shoulders straight. Once the change is there, expect it and focus on the quality. Don't continue to exaggerate aids to get the change. It is better to be more UP than side to side. Don't run, stay on the hind legs.
_______________
1st/2nd level very compliant 5 year old mare - Rhythm comes first - own the rhythm!
Ride the neck at the natural position, and then ride the body around that. Make sure the bend into the outer rein happens without changing the tempo (this was a theme throughout, no change in tempo and rhythm).
Don't rush a growing horse into an uphill balance. Do simple stuff if they are ahead in training. We want horses that are at GP for 8-9 years and sound, not breaking down their first year at GP because they were rushed.
Swing the hips at the walk and take the neck down - touch with the whip to get the overtrack. Low neck is OK in medium walk in a test at this level. Concentrate on quality of the neck stretch - look for the neck bulging on the sides (this is what Jillian Kreinbring calls the "breadbox" muscle).
The canter needs to have a rolling quality - walk and reestablish the bend as much as needed. Don't keep cantering if the horse isn't around the inside leg.
Don't cheat and cover up mistakes at home - if you do that, in the show ring you have nowhere to go. Home is for making mistakes.
_________________
Fancy 8 year old that was "fried" in German stallion testing, so showing TL at 8:
Alter the circle to maintain the connection if you must - (the connection is fragile with this horse)
Establish the connection of your dreams in the warmup.
Your tricep is part of your core, was it pertains to the outside rein. Don't float it out and give it away.
She had riders turn onto the diagonal for one step, and then do a long LY across the diagonal - Make sure the trot stays the same, you stay the same, let the exercise do the work.
Don't produce the trot right now - save the fanciness for the passage.
Counter flection - think of 1/100th of a degree to the outside of the horse's knee to straighten and allow the IH through (I started using this immediately and it is magic)
Create one warmup and do it every time, horses need routine (I think she meant all in general, but probably this one especially).
____________________
PSG horse ridden by a GP trainer:
Use your ankles to hold him up in the C/W transition. Think of a little piaffe, don't take the ankles away.
Keep rein/hand up in the neck to control impulsion coming through from the belly (she mentioned Carl Hester here several times)
When something unplanned happens, ride like you asked for it and keep going.
____________________
Other notes:
Sit very lightly into the down transitions. I thought I was, but when she had me post all the way down into the T/W transition, T's poll stayed up and the walk quality was better right away. I'll work towards that feeling without visibly posting.
Use the whip where your leg goes, not farther back. This made a big difference when I used it on Annabelle tonight. No shortage of tapping to keep the walk marching.
Zero tolerance for getting behind the leg/tempo - tap with the whip, use it like you mean it if there is a serious stall out. She recommended I get a FlexiWhip, which I'm about to go buy - I think SmartPak has them. Tempo needs to stay the same through corners, change of bend, and lateral work. "She should be taking you out to lunch and paying the bill!"
Cantering in a W/T transition is a behind the leg issue - gallop forward, and then do it again.
Rubber bits - she recommended them for me and the horse that was brain fried from the stallion testing. I've ordered a Bomber's that doesn't have a joint, but flexes at the middle.
Circles - keep looking around the circle to the next letter (duh) keep the hands up into the neck and coming around the corner.
C/T transitions - slide a bit to the outside and use the outside rein in the transition. Don't tighten the knees and thighs so much (this worked so well, T can get all scrambly in her C/T transition and this helped a lot!)
Walking - make sure it is all just swinging through the hips - no gyrating side to side or rocking forward/back with the shoulders. I found this difficult!
Keep the shoulders back like you've been stabbed between the shoulder blades and have blood running down your back.
Stirrups - she had a few of us go up a hole or two.
Ride every step - don't freeze in the transitions.
Piaffe (ground assist to rider on a ~4th level horse) helpful to start on a circle, don't overbend. This helps with diagonalization. Don't overbend - ride forward into piaffe. Too many people make the piaffe about coming backwards.
Canter/FC - make sure to keep the neck forward and out, shoulders straight. Once the change is there, expect it and focus on the quality. Don't continue to exaggerate aids to get the change. It is better to be more UP than side to side. Don't run, stay on the hind legs.
_______________
1st/2nd level very compliant 5 year old mare - Rhythm comes first - own the rhythm!
Ride the neck at the natural position, and then ride the body around that. Make sure the bend into the outer rein happens without changing the tempo (this was a theme throughout, no change in tempo and rhythm).
Don't rush a growing horse into an uphill balance. Do simple stuff if they are ahead in training. We want horses that are at GP for 8-9 years and sound, not breaking down their first year at GP because they were rushed.
Swing the hips at the walk and take the neck down - touch with the whip to get the overtrack. Low neck is OK in medium walk in a test at this level. Concentrate on quality of the neck stretch - look for the neck bulging on the sides (this is what Jillian Kreinbring calls the "breadbox" muscle).
The canter needs to have a rolling quality - walk and reestablish the bend as much as needed. Don't keep cantering if the horse isn't around the inside leg.
Don't cheat and cover up mistakes at home - if you do that, in the show ring you have nowhere to go. Home is for making mistakes.
_________________
Fancy 8 year old that was "fried" in German stallion testing, so showing TL at 8:
Alter the circle to maintain the connection if you must - (the connection is fragile with this horse)
Establish the connection of your dreams in the warmup.
Your tricep is part of your core, was it pertains to the outside rein. Don't float it out and give it away.
She had riders turn onto the diagonal for one step, and then do a long LY across the diagonal - Make sure the trot stays the same, you stay the same, let the exercise do the work.
Don't produce the trot right now - save the fanciness for the passage.
Counter flection - think of 1/100th of a degree to the outside of the horse's knee to straighten and allow the IH through (I started using this immediately and it is magic)
Create one warmup and do it every time, horses need routine (I think she meant all in general, but probably this one especially).
____________________
PSG horse ridden by a GP trainer:
Use your ankles to hold him up in the C/W transition. Think of a little piaffe, don't take the ankles away.
Keep rein/hand up in the neck to control impulsion coming through from the belly (she mentioned Carl Hester here several times)
When something unplanned happens, ride like you asked for it and keep going.
____________________
Other notes:
Sit very lightly into the down transitions. I thought I was, but when she had me post all the way down into the T/W transition, T's poll stayed up and the walk quality was better right away. I'll work towards that feeling without visibly posting.
Use the whip where your leg goes, not farther back. This made a big difference when I used it on Annabelle tonight. No shortage of tapping to keep the walk marching.
Zero tolerance for getting behind the leg/tempo - tap with the whip, use it like you mean it if there is a serious stall out. She recommended I get a FlexiWhip, which I'm about to go buy - I think SmartPak has them. Tempo needs to stay the same through corners, change of bend, and lateral work. "She should be taking you out to lunch and paying the bill!"
Cantering in a W/T transition is a behind the leg issue - gallop forward, and then do it again.
Rubber bits - she recommended them for me and the horse that was brain fried from the stallion testing. I've ordered a Bomber's that doesn't have a joint, but flexes at the middle.
Circles - keep looking around the circle to the next letter (duh) keep the hands up into the neck and coming around the corner.
C/T transitions - slide a bit to the outside and use the outside rein in the transition. Don't tighten the knees and thighs so much (this worked so well, T can get all scrambly in her C/T transition and this helped a lot!)
Walking - make sure it is all just swinging through the hips - no gyrating side to side or rocking forward/back with the shoulders. I found this difficult!
Keep the shoulders back like you've been stabbed between the shoulder blades and have blood running down your back.
Stirrups - she had a few of us go up a hole or two.
Ride every step - don't freeze in the transitions.