by Anne Gage of Confident Horsemanship

 

A follower on my Facebook page recently sent a message looking for an answer to her mare’s head swinging at the trot.

“I own an appaloosa/quarter horse mare since May 2012. Ever since I’ve had her she has had this problem with her head where she will sort of lightly balance it from left to right (at the trot only) with or without tack or a rider. We have been wondering since the beginning what could be causing this but no one has a clue. She seems very healthy, if it would cause her pain, I tell myself I would have been bucked off a long time ago.”  

Here is a video she included with her message (shared with the sender’s permission).

What I see causing the horse to move her head about is imbalance.  There are 3 factors that affect your horse’s balance.

1) Bio-mechanics  – Horses use their neck and head to balance.  As the horse moves, the neck and head swing over each front foot as it comes forward.  So, as the right front foot comes forward, the neck and head swing to the right.  As the left front foot comes forward, the neck and head swing the left.

Humans use our arms to balance.   When we lose our balance, we throw our arms about to try to save ourselves from falling down.  Horses do much the same with their neck and head.

2) Alignment – There are 3 areas of alignment that are necessary for both you and your horse be balanced and relaxed:

a)      Spine:

  • You – the straight line from your “ear through your shoulder through your hip through your heel”.
  • Your Horse – the horizontal alignment from his nose to his tail.

b) Rectangle of Shoulders & Hips – this is the same for both horse & rider.  The hips and shoulders are lined up with each other creating a rectangle.

  • You – your shoulders stay over your hips.
  • Your Horse – his hind feet track directly behind his front feet creating 2 tracks.

c) Horse and Rider – You and your horse should be aligned to each other

  • Your belly button aims between your horse’s ears
  • Your shoulders align with your horses shoulders;
  • Your hips align with your horse’s hips.

3) Riding the Bend – A horse with a left bend will be balanced turning left or leg yielding right, but will be unbalanced turning right.  With a right bend, he is balanced turning right or leg yielding left, but will be unbalanced turning left.  

In the video above, the horse is often counter bent.  As the rider turns her body in the direction they are traveling, she loses her alignment with her horse.  This puts her horse off balance and she moves her head to try to re-balance.

If the rider reads her horse’s bend and adjusts her position to stay aligned with her, they will both be more balanced.

The following is an excerpt about bend from my book, “Confident Rider, Confident Horse”. 

“Do not assume that because you are going to the left your horse has a left bend.  This is the number one cause of misalignment between horse and rider.  Practise reading your horse’s bend by looking at his neck from the withers to his ears.  Keep your belly button aimed between his ears so that your spine and his spine are always aligned to each other.  At the rising trot, adjust your post so that you are rising as your horse’s outside shoulder is going forward – that is the shoulder that is on the outside of his bend not the shoulder closest to the rail.  You may have been taught to “rise and fall with the leg on the wall” – meaning that you rise as the shoulder closest to the rail is going forward.  However, this teaching assumes that the horse has a true bend.

In order to turn and remain balanced, your horse’s bend must match the arc of the turn.  A stiff, unbending horse’s hind quarters will swing out.  If he is over bent (sometimes also called over flexed) through the neck, his shoulders will fall into the turn if his nose is tipped out of the turn or they will push out if his nose is tipped into the turn.  A counter bent horse will be unbalanced.

‘True bend’ and ‘counter bend’ are terms used to describe the horse’s bend relative to the direction he is traveling.  True bend means the horse is bent in the direction he is traveling.  So, if you are walking on the left rein (counter clockwise) and your horse is bending around your left leg so that his spine is mirroring the line you are walking, then he is in true bend.  If he is bending around your right leg when you are on the left rein, then his is in counter bend.  In order to help her horse feel balanced, calm, supple and relaxed, it is important to be able to read which bend he has at any given moment.

When talking about ‘inside’ and ‘outside’ aids I am referring to them relative to the horse’s bend.  So, regardless of the direction you are traveling, the inside leg and inside rein are on the inside of the bend.  The outside leg and outside rein on are on the outside of the bend.  If your horse is bending right, your right leg and rein are the inside aids; your left leg and rein are the outside aids.  When bending left, your left leg and rein are the inside aids; your right leg and rein are the outside aids.

Encourage your horse to bend around your inside seat bone and leg by keeping your leg just behind the girth or cinch of your saddle.  Push his barrel over as you feel your inside hip drop.  Help your horse to keep his hip in line by putting your outside leg back slightly and pushing his hip over when you feel your outside hip drop.  If the inside shoulder is dropping in, push it over by using your upper inside leg as your horse’s shoulder moves forward.  The horse can only respond to your push when his weight is off the leg you want him to move.

When working on improving your horse’s bend from your seat and leg aids, recognize when he tries a little.  Stop pushing him and reward him with a wither scratch and a short break before asking again.  Remember to reward yourself as well for a job well done.”

Click on this link to see a video showing how I use bend to bring my mare into a relaxed and balanced frame.


Click here to read the next article – What Your Horse Wants You to Know About His Posture

There are lots more practical and in depth tips on improving your Confidence and your Partnership with your horse in my book, Confident Rider, Confident Horse: Build Your Confidence While Improving Your Partnership with Your Horse from the Ground to the Saddle”.

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You’re welcome to use this article in your blog or newsletter as long as you notify me and give my credit information. ~ Written by Anne Gage of Confident Horsemanship (www.ConfidentHorsemanship.com)[vc_row][vc_column width=”1/1″][vc_separator color=”grey” style=”” el_width=””][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Anne Gage started Confident Horsemanship in 2002 after suffering the loss of her confidence for riding.  As she worked on regaining her confidence she discovered that many horse women were suffering in silence – thinking they were alone.  Anne works with horse women to help them regain their CONFIDENCE and PASSION for riding while building a PARTNERSHIP with their horses that they deserve.

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