Put Your Horse in Balance through Proper Bending
By: Lynn Palm
Have you ever ridden a horse on a curve or a circle and felt the horse speed up, lose his balance and not be able to follow the path of the curve or the circle? You may have been asking your horse to trot in a curved arc over logs in a trail class, lope a circle in a horsemanship pattern or ride a turn on a hunter course. If you’ve had this experience chances are your horse was making every effort to do what you asked, however he may not have been asked to maintain a proper bend enabling him to be balanced and maintain a steady tempo to his gait on the curve or circle.
This article will discuss “How to Put Your Horse in Balance Through Proper Bending” Our Training Tips will describe what a proper bend looks like and the aids sequence to ask your horse to bend properly. Look forward to many successes with your horse once you’ve mastered how to communicate to bend properly!
The Bend
What does a horse look like when it has a proper bend in his body?
If you look at the horse from an “overhead view” – that is if you were viewing the horse directly above him, you would see that from his poll to the top of his tail there would be a slight arc to his body. If you were riding your horse to the right you would see the horse’s head and neck slightly bent to the right. When you’re riding the horse you’ll just be able to see the corner of the horse’s right eye when traveling right. The horse’s spine will be slightly arced, and the horse will be bent around your right leg, and supported with your outside aids.
Please note that many riders think correct bending of the horse is just bending the head and neck. When you only ask the horse to bend his head and neck you only bend the head and neck and not the rest of the horse’s body. This can hurt a horse; and when done extensively, can build a horse with a rubber neck (too flexible) that will always lose his balance.
Bending a horse properly is bending the horse through his entire body from his poll (top of the head) to his dock (top of the tail).
The Relationship between Bending and Balance
When a horse is balanced, it will have a proper bend to the body as we discussed above. When a horse is not properly bent on a curve it will be unbalanced and increase or decrease speed which in turn may cause you to lose your balance. When the horse is properly bent, you’ll find it easy to steer or guide your horse because he is responding to lighter aids, to keep the same speed and to feel the horse move with free-flowing strides.
Remember:
No bend = No balance
Bend = Balance
Bending Aids Sequence
To allow your horse to bend properly on a curve you’ll need to understand and follow a correct aids sequence to get the best responses from your horse.
Both legs and both reins have to act together in order to achieve control of your horse’s body. By practicing the correct aids sequence you’ll be able to automatically adjust your aids to feel what you need to do to keep your horse bent properly.
I’ll describe the bending aids sequence as you’re riding to the right. You’ll first start with the inside right leg aid on a curve. You’ll want to do this at a walk first so you can get the feel of what you’re asking from your horse. Your right leg will be first in the sequence with the activity right behind the girth. The active right leg will ask your horse to compress his body slightly inward so he starts to bend.
Your rein aid has to come second because it controls from the horse’s poll to the withers. Your right rein or inside rein on the curve has to be next in the aids sequence to slightly flex your horse’s head to the right which will then slightly bend the neck through the shoulder to get the forehand to bend correctly.
To flex the horse’s head, you have two different rein aids; either the open rein or the indirect rein (against the neck). The open rein is used to ask for a slight bend of the head and neck, and the rein against the neck is used if a horse wants to bend the head and neck too much to the inside – in this case to bend too much to the right. The open rein is used so there is no pulling on the horse’s mouth. The hand moves sideways for the horse to give to the bit and flex the head to the right. If the horse turns to the right when using the open rein, use your indirect rein for the horse to yield to the pressure against the neck, which also moves the head inward. This will also flex the head right.
The inside leg and the inside rein are the two active aids used to bend the horse.
Next in the aids sequence you’ll use your outside left leg and left rein aid to support the bend of the horse. The left leg keeps his hips from going out on the curve. The left rein keeps the shoulder from going out or the head bending too far to the inside. You’ll use your outside or left leg slightly further back than the position of your right leg. You’ll use a light pressure with your outside leg to keep the hips from swinging out. Your outside leg will keep the horse’s hips slightly inward to create the curve from the withers to the top of the tail. The outside indirect rein is used against the neck to support the balance of the forehand.
Your inside aids are the active aids which create the horse’s bend. Your outside aids support the horse bending through the curve so he stays balanced.
Bending Aids Sequence – “How to” Active Bending Aids
- Use light or vibrating pressure with the inside leg to ask the horse to bend his body.
- Using an open or indirect neck rein, to flex the head slightly in the direction of travel to create an arc from the withers to the poll.
Supporting Bending Aids
- Move the outside leg slightly back behind the girth to keep the hips from swinging out.
- Bring the outside rein against the neck to keep the shoulder from going out on the curve and also to keep the head from going too far inside the curve.
Key Point
When you are able to bend your horse correctly on a curve you will achieve a balanced horse. There’s no greater feeling than a happier and more willing horse!
If you would like more step by step guidance for achieving a proper bend you and your horse will really enjoy Palm Partnership Training’s “How to put Your Horse in Proper Balance Through Bending” Parts I and II
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http://shop.lynnpalm.com/catalog/product_info.php/cPath/33/products_id/136
“Keep one leg on one side,
the other leg on the other side,
and your mind in the middle.”
– Henry Taylor