Ep.53 What do Ice skaters and clock faces show us about how to turn horses?

On a circle, an ice skater pushes off one foot and glides on the other as her body makes a dancer’s arabesque. She faces her torso to the outside, and if she were to allow it to rotate in, she would spiral out on the turn and fall over. In a fencing lunge, the fencer is in a similar position, and with both feet on the ground she is perhaps more like the rider. ‘Fencing lung position’ puts the rider’s outside seat bone back, though conventional theory just talks about the outside leg being back. If you imagine sitting on a clock face with 12 as the horse’s head and 6 as his tail, your outside seat bone needs to be at 7o’clock on a right circle, and 5 o’clock on a left circle. The ‘boards exercise’ teaches you a lot about your asymmetry goes right into your core - and shows you how to fix this.

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www.dressagetraining.tv's MARY WANLESS presents these podcasts helping you to ride better. Do you find yourself looking for insight into how the rider/horse interaction works? Or perhaps you wonder if the voice inside your head is giving you the correct phrase, at the ideal moment in your riding life, to help you train your horse? Look no further! Check out these 60 podcasts from Dressage Training TV's own Mary Wanless, Ride With Your Mind coach, BSHI, BSc. For more online content visit www.dressagetraining.tv