June 2007 True Collection

Help Your Horse with Cribbing.. Rather than treating
it, not knowing the cause, find out the cause to find true effective
treatment for your horse. Read the latest research on the horse's
hooves and find out the one place where the horse has proprioceptive
nerves. What is so special about the back of the hoof?
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The Four Secrets of The Art of Riding |
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"The Art of Riding is none other than the
talent and the tact which are needed in applying our science to the
living horse. With them, the results will be easy, fluent, and elegant
and without them constrained, forced and mechanical....I want to devote a little space to what are, in my opinion, the real secrets of the Art." Wynmalen
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Rider Exercise: The Hands Start Here |
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Different
schools present different ideas. This rider exercise examines which
joints are important to the functioning of a truly light hand and how
each joint must contribute if we are to give the illusion of truly
still hands.
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Watch the highlights from the 1991 Volvo World Cup where Nina Menkova, representing Russia, showed how even in the competitors from Russia today we can still see some of those elements of lightness that many believe Fillis took there. |
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A while ago, over a period of about three years, I underwent two major
surgical operations and also injured my knee badly - not riding-related
accidents, but the resulting loss of confidence around horses was the
same, notwithstanding over 40 years of riding and being with horses. I
was left with a strong sense of vulnerability and fragility which had a
definite effect on both my riding and my handling of horses, indeed my
confidence in just being around horses diminished considerably.
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Manolo: Importance of Transitions |
The
philosophy of Classical Training teaches us that the beautiful High School
movements – piaffe, passage, half-pass, tempi changes - and even the Airs Above
Ground - levade, capriole, etc. - are not tricks that are trained and performed
in isolation, independent of other movements.
In a sense, they are not even separate movements. Teaching these
movements independent of the proper basic training is to teach tricks, and
therefore to train a horse without respect. In Classical
Training everything is taught step by step; one thing leads on to the next. |
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Sandin: Elevation - Relative vs Absolute |
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How we can use these two terms of
relative elevation and absolute elevation to help penetrate and
evaluate the difference between real and false collection.
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*Purple Pony: Rollkur a Year Later |
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A snapshot as we look in at the world in regard to rollkur a year ago. It was a very
different place than where we are now. More different than perhaps you
realize. A time when people were afraid to talk about rollkur openly.
And even fewer publishers were willing to even mention the subject in
any article. They were literally afraid. |
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Luis Pine: The Gravity of Balance |
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Luis
Pine examines the gravity of balance, what it is, how it works and what
we can do improve so that with this kinetic language, the communication
is clear and intentional.
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Heuschmann: Stomach Muscles Limitations? |
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A great deal of attention has been given to
the horse’s abdominal muscles. In discussion groups, articles and
texts, in the arena and in lessons, one will hear instructors and
riders discussing the involvement of the stomach muscles in the riding
process -- the need for the horse to have good strong stomach muscles to
help carry the rider. Dr. Gerd Heuschmann presents a different perspective.
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