Miguel Tavora on the Straight & Narrow

Horses are not straight.

For one reason or another, like human beings, they are right handed or left handed. The old masters have all sorts of explanations for this. There is a suggestion that before he is born, the horse is curled to the left in the mother's belly, another possible reason is that we lead the horse on the left, saddle it on the left, feed it from the left, so we make it one sided, yet another explanation is that in the past they had a very big mane to the left, so to look that way they have to over-bend. Or that because their hearts are to one side- I even read one funny story of an instructor who came to Australia who said all around the world horses were bent to the left, except in Australia where they were bent to the right because it was on the other side of the world! What is true is that we have some horses easier on one side - others easier to the other.

That is all really beside the point, the fact is that the horses are not straight - and we must think about the old maxim, ride your horse forward, and put him straight. Ever since we started to try and train horses, making them straighter has been one of the challenges of the trainer.

The real problem is that the horse is stronger on one side, weaker and hollow on the other side - it is easier for him to stretch the stronger side, he tends to be supple on the stronger side - and on the weak side the horse has a tendency to curl and to hollow, and it is more difficult for them to stretch on that side.

It can also be the case that one hind leg is stronger than the other. The horse is able to take more weight, and push more, with that stronger leg; now whether one leg become stronger because one side was stronger, or one side was stronger and make one leg stronger, I don't care! Which comes first, the chicken or the egg is not interesting. What is interesting is the problem - the horse doesn't want to stretch one side, and one leg is not so supple and strong. That is what I have to deal with.

What is essential to understand is that suppleness is the ability to stretch, if the horse is hollow on the left, and does not want to bend to the right, the problem is not really on the right, the problem is on the left where the horse does not want to stretch.

To deal with the problem, I have to work on the way the horse uses his hind legs. If I have a horse that doesn't want to put the weight on the right hind leg and every time I try to bend him to the right, he doesn't' want to stretch on the left, and instead of bending to the right, he puts his nose to the right, his poll to the left, and he avoids the action of the right rein, he doesn't stretch the left side, yet he gave the impression of giving on the right rein.

In reality, he avoids the action of the right rein and he doesn't stretch left, and he doesn't put his full weight on the inside, right, hind leg. I have to find a gymnastic exercise that makes it easier for the rider to control that evasion of the horse, and at the same time, provide the horse with a gymnastic activity that will improve the ability to stretch the left side, and supple and strengthen the right hind leg.

One exercise that I use very often, is to ride the horse forward along the wall, asking a very little bend to the right, just asking to see a bit of the right eye and the right nostril. This is not even the shoulder-fore position, just a very slight shoulder fore, don't ask too much, just enough to stretch the outside and ride him really forward. This is also a very good way to put the horse on the outside rein, and to make the horse come on the bit and come through.

You should teach this movement in an energetic working trout, forward - the walk does not have enough natural impulsion to achieve the gymnastic I am aiming for. I use the walk to control, I use the walk if the horse resists too much, but I break it up with the trot because the walk will not solve the problem. It may solve the problem of the resistance but it will not solve the problem long term, it hasn't the gymnastic power to solve the problem of suppleness.

There are many gymnastic exercises that deal with the problems of straightness and crookedness. All the lateral work; shoulder-in, counter shoulder-in, travers, renvers, are all exercises to make the horse carry more weight on the inside hind leg, stretch the outside and come through on the bit.

What is very important when we ask the horse to yield the weak side, is to never support the horse, never hang on the inside rein. Immediately the horse gives a little bit you must release straight away the contact on the inside rein, take again, and release it, take and release, give and take, if you try to support and keep, he will hang on and tilt his head to the other side straight away.

Both legs have to push the horse, remember we have 'no reins', the reins only explore the action of the legs of the rider. The rider's legs push the horse, and when the horse really goes and we get a bit of bend, give and take, give and take, don't try and support, don't try to ask too much too soon. It must be gradual, and for some horses it is very difficult for them to bend- sometimes because they have been badly trained before, or they have conformation problems.

While we first do this gymnastic in a forward working trot, it is necessary to be able to make the same exercise in a canter. Once the horse is working well in the trot, then a very good exercise to straighten and to supple the canter, is the counter - canter. Working a lot in the counter-canter is the best suppling exercise that we have because when the horse is going in counter-canter he can't evade by putting his hindquarters out because of the wall, and you can pout the shoulders very well in front of the hindquarters, so that by just going straight the horse is making a good suppling exercise.

In the canter we do not have so much the problem of tilting because the canter is not so symmetrical by the diagonal, and the horse cannot avoid so much. He can avoid completely the bend, but if that happens then he should not canter at all, he should go back to the trot.

As well as the counter-canter, the shoulder-in in true canter is also a fantastic exercise to improve the 'throughness' and the straightness of the horse. Normally with the combination of a good counter canter, and shoulder-in canter, we can make the horse very very straight.

Sometimes if you get 'stuck' in trot, then going to canter is a good idea, in canter the horse is more likely to stretch, then when they come back to trot, they are more willing to move correctly.

Shoulder-in is such a critical exercise for so many things. Shoulder-in is a fantastic exercise to stretch the outside, to engage the inside hind leg and to start collection. when the horse is collected it is much easier to keep the straightness. I am not suggesting that you have to spend ten weeks doing nothing but the slight shoulder fore position, and then when you get that move  on to more demanding exercises like shoulder-in. Right from the start, do some of the shoulder fore and combine that with the shoulder-in. There is no doubt that the shoulder-in is the foundation of equitation. The shoulder-in helps make the horse straight, helps bending, helps engagement, helps relaxation, helps suppleness - it is the true foundation of equitation.

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