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Home
Horses For LIFE April 2008 Edition
March 2008 Edition - Thoracic Problems
February 2008 - Morgado Lusitano
January 2008 Training the Friesian
December 2007 - Nuno Video
November 2007 - Alexander Nevzorov
October 2007 Filipe Graciosa
September 2007 Freedom of Movement
August 2007 Walk Aids
July 2007 Habituation
June 2007 True Collection
May 2007 Perfect Spanish Walk
April 2007 Philippe Karl in America?
March 2007 X-ray Bits
February 2007 Dancing With Horses
January 2007 Langsamer Treiben
December 2006 Draw Reins
November 2006 Kissing Spines
October 2006 Picking an Instructor
September 2006 Anniversary Edition
August 2006 Diagonalization
July 2006 Those Crazy Frenchmen
June 2006 Rollkur
May 2006 Decontraction
April 2006 Taine and Lesage
March 2006 Changing Conformation
February 2006 East meets West
January 2006 Portugal
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November 2005
November Features
*Can YOUR Horse Breathe?
IN PRACTICE: Easy Posting
Horses NOT Breathing!! Part 2
Surveying America
What is the Mitteltrab?
Healing Horses: Four Good Legs
Riding Into Movement: How it Works!
Riding into Movement: Riding into Straightness
In Life: Emotions Controlling Us
The Ribs: Where Should I Sit?
Where should the head go?
There are Two Types of Lateral Flexion?
Who is Wynmalen?
A NEW Type of Leader
*November Editorial
Contributors and Credits
The Arch

The arch has been an architectural favorite for thousands of years. Structurally, the arch is superior for many types of construction where a distance must be spanned. Similarly, the horse's ribcage acts to distribute the rider's weight. Viewed from the front or back, the ribcage is an arch that acts as a bridge spanning the horses body. This construction allows us to ride the horse without putting undue stress on the horse's back...but only if we sit in the right place.

 

ne of the few advantages of age is being able to see a trend. Something new comes about that maybe you may have not seen before. Incredible Changes in the Last Fifty YearsThis sometimes provides us with an alternative perspective. When we look at riding from the perspective of time, we notice we have made some incredible changes in the last fifty years in where and how the rider sits. Changes that perhaps it is best to examine to see how positive or negative the changes have been.


One of the most common problems many riders have today are problems with making the horse relax and yield to the bit. With many riders frustrated as, they may know that in the final forms of collection that the horse has the neck and head proudly raised but not knowing or having the skills to have the horse relaxed AND head up. Sometimes one of the very simple realities is that the reason that some might have a problem with the ability to ride with the horse at a normal carriage and relaxed, is that sometimes literally we can be a pain in the back or at least restrictive of the back.


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November 2005 Issue - HORSES FOR LIFE Online Magazine




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November 2005 • Volume 3

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