North Run Farm’s heated indoor arena made for a comfortable respite on a brisk Minnesota winter morning. Makana, my naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse enjoyed digging into the unfrozen footing. The quality of her flat walk, running walk, and canter have noticeably improved through the jumping exercises we’ve been practicing.
However, it was a typical Minnesota winter day and Makana’s first encounter with the heater’s song and dance. Her forward flat walk came to a screeching halt each time she neared the humming heater. It wasn’t the jumping lesson I had in mind, but it was the lesson we needed. Len coached me through a course of distractions and Makana’s willful choices not to go forward. No doubt schooling through episodes like these will prepare us for future shows when we ride by clapping crowds, flapping banners, exuberant children, and the announcer’s booth.
Below are three take-a-ways from my January lesson at North Run Farm.
Lesson Tip #1: Working through distractions. Each time Makana would stop, stare, and blow back at the heater, Len suggested that I keep Makana’s shoulders, head and neck straight with a slight inside bend, and inside leg on. Then direct her into a small circle, gradually enlarging the circle until she willingly moved past the spooky object.
My previous approach to riding through Makana’s spooks has been to make her face the object, but this allows her to stop, and that rewards her for spooking. When it comes to jumping, stopping and fences do not mix.
“Forwardness,” Len said, “is not an option.”
After a few circles, Makana settled enough to proceed with jumping. Len set up a ground rail spaced nine feet before an “x.” The ground rail was meant to minimize her choices as she learns how to jump—choices like becoming airborne six feet ahead of the jump, rushing, and jumping flat.
As I approached the line, Makana was still reluctant to move forward over the ground rail and “x” toward the heater. Len observed that my grandma-leg cues were not getting the desired response, so he popped a lunge whip behind Makana as she approached the line. Thankfully, Makana began to change her mind about jumping toward the heater.
Lesson Tip #2: Rider’s position on a green horse. Len noticed that Makana became distracted each time I tweaked my aids through the line. He encouraged me to circle into a forward canter, set my aids as I approached the line, and remain quiet through the line so that Makana could focus on learning. With calves clamped on and hands low with a light contact, I made it through the line without changing my position, my contact, and my legs. I felt the HUGE difference this made!
Lesson Tip #3: Break down confrontations into small bits. Confrontations are part of life and training horses is no exception. When things go wrong, Len encouraged me to simplify instead of trying to fix multiple issues at once.
First focus on forwardness, then add forwardness and straightness, then forwardness, straightness and frame, then forwardness, straightness, frame and the fence.
Most important, don’t proceed to jumping until the horse is forward. Remember, forwardness is not an option.
On a balmy January day, Makana and I practiced our “eye” over a couple jumps and ground rails. The rails were spaced at a bounce (8 feet) and a one stride (16 feet) distance. My object was to keep my horse cantering over the ground rails without breaking stride or stopping.
In the short amount of time we’ve been dabbling with ground rails and small jumps, I’ve noticed that this work has helped my Walking Horse step deeper under her body for greater reach at a flatwalk and has improved her engagement and leap in the canter. These exercises have also helped our balance.
I’ve ridden my gaited horse at shows and clinics and through state parks. Now I wonder if starting my Tennessee walking horse over jumps would be different than a trotter?
Starting a Gaited Horse Over Jumps
By Jennifer Klitzke
Fearless, carefree and adventurous. I’ve always aspired to be an event rider, yet fear has held me back. Reflecting on the last few years with Makana, my Tennessee walking horse mare, I’m beginning to see how our experiences have prepared us for reaching this aspiration. We’ve trailered to numerous shows and clinics, ridden through several state parks, a gaited trail trial, and now to face the jumping phase.
Starting my naturally gaited Walking horse over fences wasn’t something I wanted to tackle on my own. So, we trailered to hunter/jumper barn North Run Farm in Delano, MN for professional coaching from long time instructor Len Danielson. He began our lesson by having us walk over ground rails, jump standards, and getting acquainted with flower boxes before jumping over them.
Coach Danielson says, “The trick to jumping is to never scare them.”
One advantage to having a hard trotting horse is that you can introduce a horse to fences at a trot. Since my Walking horse lacked a trot, I had to bite the bullet and do all of our jumping from the canter from the get-go. Yet I was very pleased with how calm and level-headed Makana handled her new experience. She seemed to enjoy herself as much as I did.
Here’s a few pointers Coach Danielson offered when introducing a gaited horse to jumps:
Start with walking over a ground rail, then add a second, and a third. Get the horse relaxed, take breaks, and repeat the exercise at the canter.
Keep jump sizes to ground rails and 12″-heights to build the horse’s confidence.
Keep calves on the sides of the horse to encourage forwardness and remember to grab mane so I don’t bump the horse in the mouth with the bit while jumping over the fence.
Gradually work up to a ground pole placed 16 to 17-feet before a 12″-fence to encourage one canter stride before the jump.
School these exercises once a week and the other riding days just have the horse hop over something during the riding session.
Thanks to Coach Danielson, we are on our way to making my eventing dreams come true. Who knew that I would begin this journey on a horse that doesn’t trot!
North Run Farm offers numerous year-round schooling shows, both jumping and dressage that are open to gaited horses.
Video:Starting a Tennessee Walking Horse over Jumps
I hope this is helpful. Let me know your thoughts by sending a message.
I’ve ridden my gaited horse at shows and clinics and through state parks. Now I wondered, “Can my Tennessee walking horse jump over fences?”
Can Gaited Horses Jump?
By Jennifer Klitzke
Fearless, carefree and adventurous. I’ve always aspired to be an event rider, yet fear has held me back. Reflecting on the last few years with Makana, my Tennessee walking horse mare, I’m beginning to see how our experiences have prepared us for reaching this aspiration. We’ve trailered to numerous shows and clinics, ridden through several state parks, a gaited trail trial, and now to face the jumping phase.
Starting my naturally gaited Walking horse over fences wasn’t something I wanted to tackle on my own. So, we trailered to hunter/jumper barn North Run Farm in Delano, MN for professional coaching from long time instructor Len Danielson. He began our lesson by having us walk over ground rails, jump standards, and getting acquainted with flower boxes before jumping over them.
Coach Danielson says, “The trick to jumping is to never scare them.”
One advantage to having a hard trotting horse is that you can introduce a horse to fences at a trot. Since my Walking horse lacked a trot, I had to bite the bullet and do all of our jumping from the canter from the get-go. Yet I was very pleased with how calm and level-headed Makana handled her new experience. She seemed to enjoy herself as much as I did.
Here’s a few pointers Coach Danielson offered when introducing a gaited horse to jumps:
Start with walking over a ground rail, then add a second, and a third. Get the horse relaxed, take breaks, and repeat the exercise at the canter.
Keep jump sizes to ground rails and 12″-heights to build the horse’s confidence.
Keep calves on the sides of the horse to encourage forwardness and remember to grab mane so I don’t bump the horse in the mouth with the bit while jumping over the fence.
Gradually work up to a ground pole placed 16 to 17-feet before a 12″-fence to encourage one canter stride before the jump.
School these exercises once a week and the other riding days just have the horse hop over something during the riding session.
Thanks to Coach Danielson, we are on our way to making my eventing dreams come true. Who knew that I would begin this journey on a horse that doesn’t trot!
North Run Farm offers numerous year-round schooling shows, both jumping and dressage that are open to gaited horses.
Video:Starting a Tennessee Walking Horse over Jumps
I hope this is helpful. Let me know your thoughts by sending a message.
I am a huge fan of before and after. I love shows like The Biggest Loser and Extreme Home Makeover, because I love seeing transformation. So, at the end of each riding season, I like to reflect upon where my horse and I have been, how we have improved, and what we plan to tackle next. I believe that life is an ongoing journey of learning—even for older folk like me.
I came from decades of dressage riding a non-gaited horses whose head and neck remained stationary at the trot. Then I became acquainted with the exaggerated head and neck nodding, ear flopping, and teeth clicking of the naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse at a flat walk. Fascinating.
This brings up the BIG question: How do you ride a head-nodding horse with contact? Do I follow the natural head and neck motion with relaxed hands? Or do my hands remain fixed and the horse adjusts its nod? The more I sought out an answer, the BIGGER my question became.
Riding a horse with contact involves teaching the horse how to accept and follow the snaffle bit while the rider follows the natural head and neck motion of the horse. This takes a sense of feel, timing, and technique of the rein aids to maintain a soft dialogue with the horse’s mouth while moving the horse forward from the hindquarters, through a relaxed back, fluid shoulders, and head and neck of the horse to a dialogue of contact between the rider’s hands and the snaffle bit while at the same time following the motion of the horse in a balanced riding position. A well-fitting saddle that allows the horse to move freely and comfortably is also essential.
In dressage, riding on-the-bit and establishing a round frame are requirements, but according to the late Lee Ziegler, a well-known and respected gaited trainer and clinician, riding the Walking Horse in a round frame can produce fox trot and hard trot just as hollowness can create pace, step pace, and rack. Lee also pointed out aspects of conformation which relate to a horse’s propensity to pace, four-beat gait, and trot. In any case, Lee encouraged her students to ride their gaited horses in a neutral or neutral-slightly round position.
I’ve certainly witnessed the transformation of a pacey horse brought into a four-beat gait through a lowered headset and roundness, but if the latter is true, is it possible to ride a Walking Horse “on-the-bit” and in a round frame while maintaining a flat walk and running walk?
In May I audited Larry Whitesell’s gaited dressage clinic and asked him how to ride a naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse at a flat walk, on-the-bit without restricting the head nod. He said, “You can’t.” Larry went on to say that if a horse nods its head, it must be bracing its back.
Really? I explained that the head nod is a signature attribute of the Walking Horse, and Larry said that the energy of engagement needs to be expressed somewhere. I believe Larry has something to this–although it is not to silence my Walking Horse’s head nod–but that my horse may be bracing her back.
During the lunch break I asked Larry for feedback regarding a recent video of a First Level dressage test we rode. He said, “Your horse looks happy and is where she needs to be at this level, but your horse is on the forehand.” Video: First Level Test 1>
The forehand? Gaited clinician Gary Lane and a few Walking Horse friends had also pointed this out. So, what does it mean when a Walking Horse is “on the forehand”? Does this mean that my horse is too long and low? Do I need more forwardness? Certainly, we need more engagement from the hindquarter, but how do I achieve it, how do I capture it into the bridle, what does it look and feel like, and how do these questions relate to riding my head-shaking horse on-the-bit with an unbraced back?
I spent the riding season exploring answers to these questions. In April Makana and I were honored to be one of the demonstration teams for clinician Gary Lane at the MN Horse Expo. After he had given us an “A+” on our long and low work, Gary offered insights to help my horse get “off the forehand.” He asked me to raise my hands slightly, squeeze with my calves against the horse’s sides, and release my grip on the reins. This is what he referred to as a half halt, and it resulted in a more elevated head and neck, lightness of the forehand, and a deeper head nod.
In May, I brought these questions to Makana’s former owner. She has gone on to be a Cavalia-quality horsewoman with her PRE-Andalusian mare. She stopped by and provided a few answers to these questions. She has a wonderful blend of gaited horse training, classical dressage, and natural horsemanship application. She gave me pointers on forwardness, connection, and lateral exercises.
In June, Makana and I traveled to Proctor, MN with our questions to the B.L.E.S.S. Your Walking Horse Clinic. The clinician, Bucky Sparks, offered several answers which helped me get a feel for riding with contact in a round frame while allowing my horse’s head to nod. My horse had a noticeable over track and a four-beat flat walk. I was relieved to know that it is possible to ride in roundness without breaking into a hard trot.
Bucky also helped me teach my horse to bend through the ribcage while asking for shoulder-fore, shoulder-in and haunches-in. These bending exercises began to unlock her braced back and add to her roundness and contact on-the-bit.
I also realized that forwardness and rushing are not the same thing. Forwardness can help produce balance, but rushing will cause the horse to fall on the forehand. My horse had learned to evade stepping deep from behind by taking shorter and quicker steps. I have no idea what smooth gait she had invented, but it wasn’t a flat walk or a running walk!
By slowing Makana down, I am able to establish a deeper step under her body on a long and low frame. Then when the deep steps are established, I can slowly raise my horse’s head and neck while maintaining the same deep steps. Then I can transition to flat walk for a few deep steps and transition back to a deep stepping walk.
A couple weeks after that, I met the President of the Western Dressage Association of Minnesota at a women’s horse gathering. She grew up with Walking Horses, and she noticed that my horse seemed to stop with contact. Keeping my horse moving forward has been a big challenge. I just assumed I had a lazy horse. She encouraged me to keep my arms at my sides and open and close my fingers with each head nod. This encouraged my horse to nod as she moved forward into the contact.
Ah-ha, perhaps my closed hands had been cuing Makana to slow to a stop!
Then in October at a women’s horse gathering, instructor Judy Conger explored saddle fit with my horse. We switched from my gaited western saddle to her Black Rhino western saddle that has a dish-shaped tree and is more flared in front. To my amazement, there was a noticeable improvement in Makana’s willingness to travel forward and through the corners without stopping. My western saddle hindered her shoulder movement, especially in turns. I took this awareness with me and now place my dressage saddle behind my horse’s shoulders. This has also made a difference.
Finally in November, I audited a Biomechanics Clinic taught by author and clinician Mary Wanless. Watching this clinic brought the words of her book “The Natural Rider” to life. The practical take-aways have made a difference in my riding position which has impacted my horse’s way of going.
There were many transformations this riding season. Did I lose a hundred pounds or have to “move that bus”? No, but I’ve gained many transforming answers to the BIG question. And I’m happy to report that it is possible to ride a head nodding horse at a flat walk with contact.
I hope this is helpful. Let me know your thoughts by sending a message.
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