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StableTalk - The UK's brightest on-line equestrian magazine, written by
riders for riders
Advanced Heeding Teaching Your Horse to
Lunge
Ron Meredith
When you first start teaching a horse to heed, you use
a corridor of aids or pressures to create a feeling in the
horse of where you want him to move. As the horse's understanding
increases, the handler can not only change the direction
of the horse's strides but also their length, speed, and
cadence.
Lungeing in a circle falls into the category of advanced
heeding for several reasons. First, the horse and the handler
are working in a corridor at a distance from one another.
Second, the handler is no lunger doing simple, basic heeding
with his or her primary line running parallel or perpendicular
to the horse's primary line. The horse no lunger just mirrors
the direction and speed the handler is moving. And third,
it is difficult to create a full corridor of aids that create
the exact feeling of a circle.
Before you start teaching your horse to lunge, he should
understand that when your primary line (an imaginary line
running in front and in back of you and parallel to your
spine if you were on all fours) is behind him, you are following
or chasing and want him to move forward away from you. He
should understand that when you put your primary line on
or in front of his secondary line (a neutral line running
through his withers and perpendicular to his spine), that
is a block of his forward movement which means "stop." He
should be comfortable heeding at the walk and trot in both
directions while being handled from either side. He should
understand that when you swing your primary line out away
from him or in towards him you are indicating that you want
him to turn in the direction you are opening up or closing
in.
Once he understands all that, you are ready for lungeing.
You first establish the feel of a circle by heeding him
in a circle, continually opening your primary line to the
inside to keep him turning. In the beginning, you can use
the walls near the corner of the arena to help you create
this feeling. You can also use a round pen. Round pens make
teaching lungeing easier because they help create a circular
corridor of pressures.
When the horse develops a strong feeling of a circle, you
can start heeding a little farther out from him. As you
move out away from the horse, begin gradually dropping back
toward his hip in a following motion. As you approach the
center of the circle, swing your primary line so that it
is behind the horse's withers. This continues giving the
horse a feeling that you are following and want him to move
forward. You can fuss a little with the lunge whip to move
the horse forward but the most important driving aid or
pressure is the position of your primary line. Exactly where
you put your primary line behind the horse's withers and
how quickly the horse understands the direction and speed
you want him to move is going to vary from horse to horse
and handler to handler.
It is important to set right mood and establish rhythm
and relaxation in the horse before you start moving away
from him. Then maintain that rhythm as you move into the
center of the circle. Briefly position the horse's head
with your lunge line then soften, position and soften, position
and soften. This prepares the horse later for the feeling
when he's ridden that the inside rein indicates where you
want him to position his head.
You want to establish a circle and then create a steady
rhythm that mesmerizes the horse. Anytime you use an aid
or a pressure that doesn't match the rhythm, you interrupt
the rhythm. It's the steady rhythm that maintains the circle,
not a steady pull on the lunge line. Don't hold his head
and pull him toward you to keep him on a circle. A constant
pressure on his head masks the feeling of where you are
and spoils the corridor of pressures you want to create.
When you are working in a round pen, be especially aware
of maintaining the horse's rhythm. Don't put so much pressure
on him that he begins bicycling around the perimeter of
the pen. You want rhythm and relaxation, not speed.
Some horses have a problem positioning their head to the
inside, especially in one direction, because there is no
full corridor of pressures directing them on the circle
or because they may be stiff or weak on one side or the
other. A round pen can help create a corridor of aids but
it won't necessary correct the horse's head position if
he has physical problems.
When you are heeding alongside a wall or fence and you
want the horse to trot, you indicate this by taking bigger
steps and making a little fuss behind you with your whip.
Then when you want your horse to trot on the lunge, use
those bigger steps and a little fuss with the whip to help
him understand you want him to change gaits. Similarly,
prepare the horse for stopping on the lunge by adding vocalizations
to your stops while you are heeding along a wall or fence.
Then when you are lungeing, you can use a little "ho, ho,
ho" along with moving your primary line ahead of his withers
to ask him to stop.
If the horse stops on the circle and stays standing in
the direction he was traveling, just walk up his neutral
line, scratch a groom a little, then turn and start him
off with a little heeding in the other direction before
you drop back to the center of the circle again. The horse
may stop and turn to face you, especially if you are using
a round pen. Then just walk up his primary line, scratch
and groom, then heed him in the new direction you want him
to move off.
© 2001 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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