Showing posts with label Equine Affaire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Equine Affaire. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Equine Affaire: Clinicians

Stacy Westfall
Fortunately for me, the 8 hour drive I was expecting ended up only being 7- which meant I arrived early enough to catch Stacy Westfall's first clinic on riding bridleless. I was impressed by her teaching style, she was well-spoken and structured. She also said something that reminded me of Alexandra Kurland: she said that the first motion of any transition is the most important, if the horse starts wrong don't keep going hoping that the horse will fix itself, start over and help the horse start correctly. As many times as it takes.

This reminded me of Alex because of one of the "problems" many people have with clicker training- that when you click you stop the motion. What Alex says is that gives you opportunities to start over and reinforce good transitions. Thus how I've been training Coriander to pick up the left lead, we get three steps, C/T, and start over. This way we get a lot more bang for our buck. Interesting how good trainers think alike.


Jeff Wilson
The western dressage clinician. He was very knowledgeable and rode a nicely trained little morgan stallion, the problem was he was boring. He spent way too much time sitting still and lecturing and not enough time demoing. I felt like he would have done better to briefly explain a movement, like haunches-in, and then ride it so that people could see what he was talking about. I think he was pretty new to this environment though, so he'll probably get better with time.

Linda Parelli
I promised I would go see her with an open mind and I did. I went to two of her clinics, one on humanality and one on the "Game of Contact." For you Parelli fans, I agree with she is a very engaging speaker, plus she has that accent that Americans cannot resist. I will also commend her for her "Game of Contact" concept, it's the Parelli method to help horses accept the bit without the use of gadgets or rollkur. So yes, I liked that- BUT- it was really just French classical dressage repackaged. The first step in her game is Philippe Karl's first jaw flexion exercise, followed by lengthening the neck and stretching long and low. Unlike Karl, she did not mention anything about the movement of the jaw and mouth and how that helps a horse to relax. For that, I give her "Game of Contact" a 2 out of 3.

Unfortunately her demo riders were distracting. One of the riders kept hanging on the front of her saddle with one hand while she rode. Why? I don't know. The other would post for a few strides, look like she fell behind the movement, bounce in the saddle for a few strides, post again- never on the correct diagonal. I couldn't take my eyes of her because I couldn't figure out what she was doing! Of course neither of them had a helmet either, but I guess I shouldn't pick on that since I only saw ONE person ride in a clinic with a helmet all weekend.


Jim Masterson

What a nice guy he is! He was obviously new to this whole Equine Affaire clinic setup as he had a hard time staying on task and didn't have much structure. But to me that wasn't a problem, I wanted to see the techniques and the horses' reaction to them and that's what I got. There is quite a bit to his method that I couldn't quite understand from the book that became clear as I was watching him- for one thing I've been using too much pressure. I went over to his booth afterwards to speak with him and buy the DVD, and he was very open to answering questions and discussing my horses' stance issues.

Todd Flettrich
Bleh! He was the only "dressage" clinician there and I couldn't sit through one whole clinic with him. I watched his clinic on riding accurate movements for first through third level and all of the riders were seesawing on their horses' mouths, all the horses were overbent, on the forehand, and the riders never ever let them stretch down!  And he was advocating this! Only one rider made it look like she was letting her horse stretch and really all she was doing was lowering her hands around her knees while still keeping a death grip on the reins. Heaven forbid she should let go and her horse's nose should pop up in the air (which it did when he managed to tug the reins out of her hands). NOT impressed.

Aaron Ralston
Mmmm, eye candy. What can I say? This guy was attractive, and his boots were awesome. I caught his clinic on riding horses through spooks, what really liked was how he emphasized that you can't take the spook out of your horse, you can only change how you respond to the spook as a rider. He had his riders establish their horses on a circle of cones, with a cone in the center as a pivot point. He had the rider and the horse put all their attention on the pivot point and then he'd induce a spook (with an umbrella). The rider was then supposed to let the horse spook for a few strides and then direct them back on the circle. This way the horse could move their feet and feel better but the rider was still able to give direction. It seemed to work out really well and I'm keeping it in mind for my spooky little girl.

He was also very open to questions from the crowd (sometimes to the detriment of his riders). One woman sitting behind me asked how this exercise can help her since when her horse spooks he flies sideways, she flies off, and then he flies away. Ralston basically told her (paraphrasing) that her horse didn't see her as being trustworthy and dependable and was taking matters into his own hooves. To help her horse, she would have to become a better rider and stop being a passenger. He said this as nicely as he could, but I liked how he didn't mince words with her.

Next post: Mark Rashid!

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Equine Affaire

That's where I'm heading this Thursday!

It's going to be a long drive to Ohio but it will be worth it when I get to see Mark Rashid and Jim Masterson in person. I'm also planning on attending a Mark Bolender clinic on trail riding, an Alan Hamilton lecture or two on horse neurology and a Jeff Wilson clinic on western dressage. I'm also going to say hi to Heath at No Thrush and let Carole know how much I absolutely adore my Ansur Crossover.

I also promised my clients I would go to a Linda Parelli lecture with an open mind. I figure one of the "horsonality" lectures should be entertaining at least.

If you're going and you want to say hi, I have a very unique white streak in my hair above my left ear. If my hair is in a ponytail you can't miss it. I'll warn you right now, though, I'm weird and awkward in person.

This video is completely unrelated to Equine Affaire, but it cracked me up so I had to share: