I was interviewing
a prospective student the other day - the very proficient youth-pleasure-trail-horsemanship
rider who just wanted to "get a certificate" so she could "get a job as
a trainer" type - the type whom I have seen so often. I was explaining,
as carefully as I could, that the skills produced by a program are what
give a "certificate" its value. Toward that end I mentioned some of the
specific exercises and lessons needed to transform her show ring expertise
into professionally marketable products. About half way into my thousand-time
rehearsed explanation, her mother piped up with, "In other words, honey,
you have to go back to the basics."
"Pardon me," I wish
I had said, "but you don't have to go back to basics when you have never
been up to basics in the first place."
What really are the
basics that count? Whether you are afraid of being on top of a horse?
Whether you know how to tighten a cinch or adjust a bridle; or pass in
the clear in front of a judge; or back a four-horse gooseneck with a crew
cab dually? These are basic maybe, but not what I'm talking about.
The basics I'm interested
in are the ability to get a horse to work off its haunches; to follow
its head in both directions without sticking out its shoulder; and to
flow through its spins, rollbacks, and lead changes without hitching up,
dragging, spiking its leads, cranking its tail, or hanging in your hands!
Basically, I want
to see young riders whose understanding surpasses their age; whose practiced
skills compliment, not limit their ability; and whose enthusiasm is transformed
into try in the horses they work. These are not "basic" basics, I know.
After all, I have watched and helped a couple of thousand would-be pro's
search for them. Some found the basics and have adopted them as a way
to life - some will probably never find them.
Before I tell you
where to look for "the basics," I'll tell you where you probably won't
find them.
First and foremost,
you will never find them your first time in the show ring. In the ring
you show what you are, not work on what you dream of becoming.
The second place
where the basics are noticeably absent is pleasure riding or practicing
at home, on your own horse. Every rider-horse combination comes to an
understanding based upon the rider's knowledge and determination as opposed
to the horse's acceptance of direction. Thinking that a rider can learn
what "can be" from a horse "as he is," without outside direction, is like
thinking Mary Lou Retton could have done what she did by staying home
and swinging in a tire swing over a swimming hole.
So where do you look?
Look to a methodically and meticulously designed program specifically
crafted and practiced to a single basic job - to teach you the basics!
Here is how you will
know when you have found it:
First, your instructor
will be more interested in you as a rider than he is in you as a horse
buyer - in fact he may not even like discussing breeds, bloodlines, or
show results.
Second, your riding
lessons will concentrate on your mental and physical ability to create
shapes, attitudes, and understanding in many, many horses.
Third, basically,
the future world of the professional trainer will be a world of circles.
You need to be taught to change flexion in the direction of travel - to
change direction and flexion and to maintain the impulsion through it
all.
And if that sounds
a little complex, it is - because it is basic to athletic development.
And that is "the basics" scheme which will allow you to mold the raw material
you find in young athletic horses into saleable, finished horses.
That's what trainers
try to do, isn't it?
About the author:
Dr. Meredith has over
thirty years experience as president of the Meredith Manor International
Equestrian Centre and has developed it from its humble beginning of six
students in 1963 to its current world class level. Because of his outstanding
contributions to the horse industry and specifically to equestrian education
he has received a number of distinctive recognitions. One of the most
significant is an Honorary Doctorate of Equestrian Studies Degree from
Salem College in 1981, the only degree of this kind in the world. Dr.
Meredith has held seven AHSA judges cards and has trained top level horses
and riders in the cutting and reining world.
About Meredith Manor
Meredith Manor's objective is to produce professional riders for the international
horse industry. Our program's core is riding and the ways in which it
can be marketed. We are committed to a teaching and learning process that
will provide our students with the critical skills necessary to enjoy
life-long careers in the horse industry. We are committed to teaching
these skills in such a way as to enable our students to deal with horses
in all aspects of the industry in the most humane manner without the use
of force or punishment. Our mission is to prove the superiority of humane
methods through our graduates
© 2000 Meredith Manor
International Equestrian Centre. All rights reserved. Instructor and trainer
Ron Meredith has refined his "horse logical" methods for communicating with
equines for over 30 years as president of Meredith Manor International Equestrian
Centre, an ACCET accredited equestrian educational institution.
Rt. 1 Box 66
Waverly, WV 26184
(800)679-2603
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