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- Path: sparky!uunet!news.larc.nasa.gov!alpha.larc.nasa.gov!patty
- From: patty@alpha.larc.nasa.gov (Patty Howell)
- Newsgroups: rec.equestrian
- Subject: Re: Dressage bitting
- Date: 18 Nov 1992 22:14:55 GMT
- Organization: NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA USA
- Lines: 163
- Message-ID: <1eef8vINNaiv@rave.larc.nasa.gov>
- References: <1992Nov13.181657.13026@informix.com> <1e1623INNl96@rave.larc.nasa.gov> <1e8u2rINN4tt@gap.caltech.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: alpha.larc.nasa.gov
-
- >prejudiced that reflects very badly on the judge. Also should a judge score
- >me lower for expressing my beliefs--what the heck it's just a dressage test,
- >it's not the end of the world!
-
- yeah, yeah, I know. And horses *are* just a hobby, not a livelihood
- for most of us.
- I just think it would be better to wait, especially after you've
- just dropped $400-$500 in entry fees/stabling/transporting/show gear....
-
-
- [stuff deleted (Grisone makes for grisly reading)]
-
- > Absolutely correct, thus there are some things about which the
- >old masters were wrong.
-
- And some things they knew about that today's horsemen don't.
- [NOT Grisone. I hardly revere that fellow. But Newcastle I do hold
- in very high regard, as I do Xenophon. The contributions of de la
- Gueriniere are of course put on a pedestal by everyone (which I think
- is a little much, he had his faults, too...) And of course, there
- are many others]
-
-
- >> "Regrettably, spurs are worn today beginning in Training Level.
- >>Fundamentally, I beleve the same consideration should apply to spurs as the
- >>double bridle: they should only be allowed at Fourth Level and above.
- >>Uneducated legs should not be armed with spurs, just as uneducated riders with
- ----------------------------------------------
- >>poor hands are not allowed to ride with a double bridle until they are
- >>sufficiently proficient to perform at Fourth Level or above."
-
- [stuff deleted]
-
- > No, he would prefer that spurs not be used at all, he sees too
- >many upper level riders ruining good rides by over-using them, or
- >using them badly, or even using them as a crutch to cover lack of proper
- >training however barring that he would limit spurs to 4th level and above,
- >no use on lower level horses regardless of the level of the rider. He
- >would prefer that the double bridle not be used in high level competition
- >either because too many people rely too heavily on it as a crutch as with
- >spurs.
-
- O.K., his "dream" would be to remove the double bridle and the spurs
- forever from the dressage world. (I think I said that: "although he would
- prefer they not be used at all") Failing that, which he knows would
- never happen (changes usually have to be gradual), he'll settle for
- no spurs at the lower levels (which I agree with). His *reasoning*
- for this, which I have underlined above, is because of the level
- of the *rider* ("Uneducated legs should not be armed w/ spurs")
- *My* reasoning is because of the level of the *horse*. I agree with
- Steinbrecht, who said the seat should be adjusted to accomodate
- the horse's level of training. In other words, it is impossible
- to have a deep, comfortable seat on a lower level horse, thus
- spurs cannot be used with finesse until about fourth level.
- Steinbrecht is revered in the dressage world, yet he was apparently
- ahead of his time on this one (trainers still insist on teaching
- "dressage equitation" to green riders on *green horses* - Steinbrecht
- would be appalled (train of thought goes careening off in another
- direction....)
-
- >> It is hard for me to believe that there are people at the top levels
- >> that still don't know how to properly adjust a curb. If so, they are
-
- > Unfortunately there are, I have only been riding dressage for
- >2 years and yet I have seen it. Dr. Gahwyler in our conversation pointed
-
- You've certainly picked up more in 2 years than many dressage
- riders ever learn (certainly more than I learned in my first 2 years -
- of course I was only about 11 yrs old at the time ;> )
-
- [stuff deleted]
-
- >many times. BEFORE he said that I watched a rider do an Intermediare I
- >test where the horse she was riding was sorely pissed because every time
- >she asked for a change of lead she jabbed him with her spur [...]
-
- I, too have seen similar use of the spur, and it is very ugly. The
- "hoppy hop" at every lead change is also yucky, as is the tail
- switching in the piaffe, and the pumping rider at the piaffe
- (Robert Dover does this all the time and it drives me crazy) and
- the basically freight train, bunched up performance (this last was
- being *rewarded* at the L.A. olympics - kindof turned me off Klimke
- until I saw his tapes, so he was obviously riding that way for the
- judges) The point is that all of this is wrong, but there is no
- change of tack that will cure these ills (except the first spur
- part) and all things that can influence lower level riders.
- It is going to have to be left up to the discriminating rider.
- Even a rider of high repute can have a bad day, and everyone
- should be bright enough to know that and judge according to
- what they see.
-
- > a bigger impression) If a double bridle is an added difficulty, they
- > don't belong in the higher levels.
- {meaning the rider}
-
- > The problem here is that there are many people who will copy a person
- >who rides bad higher level tests just because they are riding a higher level
-
- You have enough intelligence to distinguish a good ride from a
- bad one, don't you think other people can, too? And if they can't
- they'll never make it in dressage anyway, whether all the
- examples at higher levels are perfect or not.
-
-
- >>You are judging a philosophy you are against by the worst examples.
- >>(and a philosophy you are for by its best) I have seen just as many
- >>horrible rides on a snaffle, and breathtaking rides with a full
-
- > But few of those horrible rides with snaffles were above the
- >lower levels, I'd guess! Horrible rides and problems are supposed to
- >be worked out at the lower levels with a snaffle before proceeding
- >higher. Unfortunately many people look at the higher levels as a
- >chance to get around a problem by using a double bridle rather than
- >as a reward for solving the problem.
-
- You would guess wrong. I have also *ridden* horses trained to higher
- levels, with their trainers coaching me along, (in snaffles by the
- way), who finally took the reins and "played horse" to my rider -
- the "feel of the horse's mouth" was incredible! By the end of
- that session, I thought I'd dislocated my arm sockets!
-
- >>bridle. The important thing is the rider, not the bit. A bad rider
- >>trying to strong arm a performance will never be a pretty picture,
- >>whether in a snaffle or a curb, although in a snaffle, "bad hands"
- >>are not as obvious to the spectator.
-
- > I disagree it is just the other way around, bad hands with a snaffle
- >can be seen much more easily as the horse immediately hollows and loses
- >collection, a curb tends to cover it up unless the errors are outrageous.
-
- Balogna. If you can't do it in the snaffle, there's No Way
- you can do it in a curb. Even Dr. Gahwyler says that
- the curb is a detriment to most riders - it is more difficult and
- requires more finesse. You can take an extremely hard feel
- on a horse w/ a snaffle, put a dropped noseband on so they
- can't open their mouths, and no spectator will be the wiser.
- And that is still a bad hand rider. If you can hollow their back in
- a snaffle, you can do it ten times easier in a curb.
-
-
- > I have often talked to high level riders who when asked
- >'what is the curb bit used for on the double bridel?' answer 'nothing,
- >the horse should be ridden solely on the snaffle'. Yet you
- >will see riders relying on the curb to achieve collection and balance
- >and the snaffle rein going loose. How many high level riders can actually
- >drop their curb completely and ride a high level test on just the snaffle?
-
- Well, I can't speak for others, but I know I can. I also used to do
- reining patterns and jump courses without any headgear at all (with
- my third level 1/2 arab pony I had as a kid. I admit it, I was
- showing off).
-
-
- >Well the two women I saw could and did, and did a better job riding those
- >tests than many I have seen riding those same tests in a full bridle. This
- >doesn't mean it is impossible to ride well in a full bridle, but it does show
- >a true test of horsemanship to ask them to ride without!
-
- It is a "true test" of horsemanship only if you regard horsemanship
- as a test of strength instead an art.
-
-
- patty@alpha.larc.nasa.gov
-