Developing an Independent Seat
Developing an Independent Seat
by
Faith
Meredith
Director, Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre
Developing an independent seat is absolutely essential if a rider
aspires to the upper levels of any equestrian sport. An independent
seat is wonderful to have, beautiful to see, but difficult to
describe in words. A rider with an independent seat can move each
body part independently. Each part of his or body is flexible enough
and strong enough to do its job without any compensation in another
part. He or she can balance perfectly over the horse’s center of
gravity at any gait without any hint of gripping or tilting. She can
shift her pelvis to half halt without tensing her shoulders or
falling behind the vertical. He can shift his weight on his inside
seat bone and bring his shoulder back to ask for a spin without
collapsing a hip or grabbing with his legs.
An independent seat starts on the ground. If riders cannot
independently control their body parts before getting in the saddle,
there is not going to be a sudden transformation when their feet are
in the stirrups. A rider whose balance on the ground is a bit shaky
or who is physically unfit will not be able to achieve a completely
independent seat once mounted. Activities that help develop both
strength and balance such as skating, skiing, yoga, dance or martial
arts can help riders cross train to achieve an independent seat for
riding. Mounted riders can work without stirrups or reins on a longe
line or in a jumping lane to achieve balance without gripping. The
more control a rider develops over his or her own body movements,
the more precisely he or she will be able to use body language to
communicate with a horse whether on the ground or from the saddle.
Relaxation is absolutely key to development of an independent
seat and relaxation, too, starts on the ground. Meredith Manor’s
“heeding” system of groundwork teaches students to move with
relaxation and rhythm so that their horses will move that way, too.
Students learn that their body language communicates a huge
vocabulary of nuances to their horses. This attitude of rhythm and
relaxation and the understanding that even small movements can
create huge responses in the horse also figure in the development of
an independent seat when they carry them over from handling the
horse from the ground to working with it under saddle. Starting out
on reliable schoolmasters can help more timid riders relax as they
develop balance and other skills on their way to achieving an
independent seat.
The rider who is gripping with her thighs and knees and whose
heels angle downward from a locked ankle may look like she has good
form. She may even win ribbons. However, her stiff form blocks full
communication with her horse. Her aids will be like cell phone
static. They may be garbled. Worse still, the batteries may go dead
and communication may stop altogether because the horse starts to
ignore her constant aid pressures.
The rider with an independent seat is completely relaxed yet able
to use any muscle independently of any other muscle at any time in
order to use that muscle as an aid pressure whenever she wants. Her
ankles, knees, hips, and elbows are relaxed, flexible, and soft. Her
head and shoulders are loose, nodding almost imperceptibly at the
top of her spinal column in rhythm to the horse’s gaits. There is no
unproductive tension anywhere in her body. She is able to
communicate with her horse with great nuance.
There is a mechanical level of understanding of horse
communication that tells us what combinations of aids communicate
what patterns to the horse when we ride. Riders need to comprehend
this mechanical language but they also need to understand that it is
like speaking only to their horses in the present tense.
Communication may be clear but limited.
Developing an independent seat is like developing an
understanding of more sophisticated verb forms. Now the rider can
talk to the horse in the present tense, future tense, future perfect
and so on. They can fine tune their performance by small degrees.
Muscle memory develops over time so that the rider no longer even
thinks about each mechanical aid sequence every time he or she asks
the horse for a particular maneuver. Now they communicate so
effortlessly that they appear to be of one mind. Both horse and
rider have reached a level of athleticism that is a beautiful thing
to see. This should be the ultimate goal of every serious rider.
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