The Importance of Timing
The Importance of Timing
by
Faith
Meredith
Director, Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre
We communicate with a horse by using a corridor of pressures that
suggest the shape, the pace, and the direction we want the horse to
take. Removing a pressure is the horse’s “reward.” It is the way we
communicate to the horse, “Yes! That’s right.” If your timing is off
when you either apply a pressure or remove it, your communication
becomes garbled. The horse will not make a clear connection between
a particular pressure or corridor of pressures and the response you
expect from him.
This is true whether you are working with your horse on the
ground or from the saddle. When you work a horse on the ground, you
create a corridor that corresponds to your legs when you are riding
by using the wall or fence as one side of the corridor and your body
and a whip as the other side. When you tip your whip toward the
horse, it is like squeezing with your leg when you are in the
saddle. When you bring your whip away from the horse or point it at
the ground, it is like taking your leg off.
To develop a good sense of timing, you first have to understand
the exact sequence of the horse’s footfalls within each gait. Then
you have to learn to feel each of those footfalls from the saddle.
Only then will you be able to time the application of your aids with
the horse’s footfalls.
For example, the outside hind foot steps into the first beat of
the canter. So, as the horse is walking, when the rider feels her
outside seat bone beginning to drop, she knows that her horse’s
outside hind foot is lifting off the ground and moving forward in
the air. That is the precise moment when she applies the corridor of
aids for a canter. If you want a left lead canter, apply your canter
aids as your right seat bone begins to drop. If you want a right
lead canter, apply the aids as the left seat bone drops.
Applying an aid with the correct timing is just the first step.
You also need to remove the aid as soon as the horse responds
correctly. A constant pressure goes away. The horse simply learns to
ignore it as having no meaning. So, while the pressure of the girth
around his chest may communicate to the horse that you intend to
ride, it does not give him any information about shape, pace, or
direction at any point during your ride. Similarly, if a rider
maintains her balance by hanging on the bit and reins, the horse
starts to ignore the bit. If the rider stays on by gripping with her
thighs or lower leg, the horse learns to ignore the leg.
As we train horses, we first show them what we want. Then we ask
them. When they understand what we are asking, then we can tell them
to do it using the correct timing of our aids. If a trained horse
that we are sure understands what we are telling them to do chooses
to ignore us, we can reinforce our aids with whip or spur. Timing is
critical for correct reinforcement. Smacking a horse with a crop
after he has refused a jump, for example, is totally useless. The
reinforcement must come at the exact moment you feel the refusal
starting as you are approaching the jump. When you reinforce your
aids using correct timing, you do not interrupt the horse’s rhythm
or forward movement.
Here at Meredith Manor we preach about “riding every stride.” As
a student rides through a sequence of maneuvers, she must apply and
release the correct aids stride by stride to either maintain or
change the horse’s shape, pace, and direction of travel. As a
horse’s level of training and experience increases, applying every
aid at every stride may become superfluous. However, thinking about
riding every stride keeps riders riding. It helps them understand
that they should not apply the aids for a particular gait or
movement and then hold them there, creating a constant pressure,
until they want a change.
It also curbs the tendency of some riders to think of aids as
“switches” that just turn various gaits or patterns on and off. They
think they can apply the aids for the canter, for example, then just
sit in the saddle and lope along until they want to turn the canter
“off” with another set of aids. In between those start and stop
signals, the horse gets no direction from the rider. He is on his
own. Depending on his personality, he may decide to take over and do
what he pleases or he may become anxious and insecure because the
application of the aids feels like a trick question. He gets no
reassuring feedback from his rider that he has done the correct
thing.
Feedback works in both directions. A well trained schoolmaster is
your best teacher when you are learning to time your aids correctly.
If you do not get the response you want when you apply your aids and
you know that the horse knows the drill, you can assume that the
communication glitch comes from your side of the saddle. Think about
whether you applied the correct set of aids at the correct moment in
the horse’s sequence of footfalls and try again. If you reinforce
your aids on a fully trained horse and get a dramatic response such
as head tossing or tail switching, the horse is telling you that you
applied the reinforcement at the wrong time or with too much force.
The importance of timing the application and release of aids
correctly and of constantly receiving and interpreting feedback from
your horse are two of the reasons that pairing a green horse with a
green rider seldom works. That said, most riders do not have the
luxury of a schoolmaster in their barn to help them refine their
timing. Both they and their horses are somewhere between green and
seasoned. They often struggle to figure out if a lack of response to
their aids is due to application of the wrong aids, poor timing of
their aids, or a horse that has learned to take advantage of its
rider’s uncertainty. When this happens, seek help from a competent
instructor to sort things out before safety issues spoil your riding
fun.
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