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Misconceptions about Gaited Dressage

Misconceptions about Gaited Dressage

Does dressage permanently alter smooth gaits? How is gaited dressage different from rail class shows? Could rider aids influence the outcome of a horse’s gait?

Misconceptions about Gaited Dressage

By Jennifer Klitzke

Dressage will make my gaited horse trot. Cantering my gaited horse will ruin my horse’s natural smooth gait. Dressage will destroy my gaited horse’s show gait. These are misconceptions about dressage for the gaited horse.

Where do misconceptions come from?

  • Do people watch a recognized dressage show with non-gaited horses and believe that competition dressage makes horses trot?
  • Do people expect to see show gait from beginning to end of a gaited dressage test?
  • Do people believe that dressage permanently alters the length of stride when a gaited horse shows collected movements with shorter strides?
  • Do people think that competition dressage is evaluated with the same criteria as rail class?

Here’s good news! Dressage teaches the rider a balanced riding position and effective use and timing of rein, leg, seat, and weight aids. This is a communication system with the horse to improve the quality of natural smooth gaits on cue and develops the horse’s full range of motion. Dressage can even improve the quality of the show gait!

You can learn dressage with your gaited horse and reap these great benefits without ever showing. If you do show competitive dressage with your gaited horse, here’s more good news…

Gaited Dressage and Rail Class are Different

First of all, competition dressage and rail class shows are judged by different criteria. It is like comparing apples and oranges.

How Gaited Dressage is Evaluated

medium-walk

Competition dressage offers many levels and tests from Introductory two-gait tests to upper level three-gait tests. The higher-level tests require more range of development such as extended through collected gaits and engagement from the horse.

In competition dressage the rider and horse perform a test in front of a professional judge. The horse and rider are evaluated on how well the rider helps the horse execute the Pyramid of Training as they move through a series of required gaits, transitions, and movements precisely on the letter.

The 2019 Pyramid of Training:

  • Rhythm (Regularity and Tempo)
  • Suppleness (Elasticity and Freedom from Anxiety)
  • Contact (Connection and Acceptance of the Bit
    through Acceptance of the Aids)
  • Impulsion (Engagement and the
    Desire to Go Forward)
  • Straightness (Improved Alignment and Equal,
    Lateral Suppleness on Both Reins)
  • Collection (Balance and Lightness of the Forehand
    from Increased Engagement)

Harmony and submission are factors in scoring, as well as the horse’s gait quality; the rider’s balanced position; and the rider’s effective use and timing of leg, seat, weight, and rein aids as the horse is ridden through the test requirements.

Competitive dressage is a great way to confirm where you and your gaited horse are at in your training. You’ll get written feedback by a professional dressage judge which can help you know where you need to improve or confirm that you and your horse are ready to move up a level.

How Rail Class is Evaluated

TWH 3 gait trail pleasure class.
Tennessee walking horse three-gait Trail Pleasure class.

Rail class is a performed in a group of horse/rider teams. A judge will award ribbons for first through sixth place. The judge evaluates the horse’s movement according to the class requirement. For Tennessee walking horse rail classes, big strides and exaggerated head nods are prized.

To achieve a maximum length of stride, the horse needs to be positioned in a frame where the hind leg trails behind the tail and pushes from behind while the other hind leg steps deep under the body to pull the horse along. This frame positions the horse in a neutral to hollow back and flat croup where the push and pull of the hind legs activate the head and neck nod with each step.

The Rail vs Rider Aids

A horse ridden in rail class is predominantly ridden in straight lines along the rail. During a dressage tests, there is no rail for the horse to follow so the horse needs to be directed by the rider’s balanced riding position and effective use and timing of rein, leg, seat, and weight aids.

The purpose of the rider aids is to lead the horse through the test requirements of circles, transitions between gaits and directions, and lateral exercises. The goal is to produce soft, round, relaxed, engaged, and balanced movements.

Why the show gait isn’t seen throughout a gaited dressage test

The show gait is achievable during portions of a dressage test when a flat walk or running walk is called for along the diagonal. However, the show gait becomes bio-mechanically impossible to maintain during collection while the horse performs small circles and lateral movements.

Collected and engaged
Collection and engagement place the horse in a frame that bends the hips and hindquarter joints. The horse carries more weight from behind and lightens the fore. Instead of pushing and thrusting with its hind leg steps for maximum length of stride, the hind steps remain in front of the tail and under the horse.

Here’s why. As the horse advances to higher levels of engagement and collection, the rider encourages the horse to bend the hindquarter joints to carry more weight from behind, engage the abdominal muscles to bring the back to a neutral to slightly round position, while engaging the chest and shoulder muscles to lift the wither and lighten the forehand. The horse grows taller in the wither, head, and neck. The movement produced by this posture is biomechanically different than that of the show gait. This makes it impossible for the horse to push and pull with the hind legs and produce the same length of stride as in rail class.

Instead the horse’s steps are shorter because there is little to no trailing of the hind leg extending behind the tail. The collected gait shortens and the head nods less.

stride length: pushing power vs carrying power
Notice as pushing power increases the hind leg becomes disengaged (stepping behind the tail) and the overall stride length increases. As carrying power increases, the hind leg disengages less (steps less behind the tail) and the stride becomes shorter.

Does Dressage Permanently Alter Gait?

Does this mean that dressage permanently alters gait? Yes and no. Yes in the way that dressage helps the naturally gaited horse develop its full range of motion and improves the quality of its natural gaits—collected through extended.

No in the way that collected gaits or extended gaits are simply the response of a horse’s training combined with the application of rider aids that position the horse in the expression of gait. One set of aids allow more carrying power from behind for collected gaits. Another set of aids allow more push and pull for maximum stride length.

Dressage helps the naturally gaited horse develop its full range of motion so that even the show gait can improve in quality with deeper strides. Plus, dressage teaches the rider a balanced position and effective use and timing of the rein, leg, seat and weight aids.

Does dressage permanently alter gait? Yes it does, but in the best possible way.

Enjoy the journey!

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Back to Fore Connected by Core to Improve Natural Gait

back and fore connected by core

Let’s be honest. How many of us who show naturally gaited Tennessee walking horses are fixated on the hind leg depth and length of stride (the distance between the hind foot behind the horse’s tail to the hind foot beneath the belly)?

I know I have been.

Back to Fore Connected by Core to Improve Natural Gait

By Jennifer Klitzke

There is nothing wrong with striving for the BEST possible natural stride length our naturally Tennessee Walking Horses can offer. However, I realized that focusing on the hind leg stride length is only part of the equation to achieving a quality flat walk and running walk.

Think this through with me.

If the hind legs offer a big stride (the distance between the hind foot behind the horse’s tail to the hind foot under the belly), the front foot stride length distance needs to equal this or else the horse face plant. Right?

Below is the sequence of a full stride of flat walk. Notice the length of hind stride and fore stride along with the head nod.

Hind step
Hind leg stride with head nod, snaffle bit contact and following hands.
Fore step
Fore leg stride with head nod, snaffle bit contact and following hands.

In order to create the best possible natural smooth flat walk, I think back to fore, connected by core.

Here’s what I mean by back to fore connected by core. First, I establish my naturally gaited Tennessee Walking horse in relaxed balance and forward movement without rushing to develop an even rhythm. At the same time, I follow her natural head and neck motion with my hands to encourage a soft contact. In addition, I follow her side-to-side belly sway with my lower legs and hold my weight in my thighs with my core without tensing. Together this helps my horse produce her best possible smooth flat walk with the most over track she is capable of.

When the naturally gaited horse is working back to fore connected to core, the hind footsteps deeper under the belly and under my center of gravity. This produces my horse’s maximum over track along with maximum depth of back stride equaling the fore stride.

091718 hind fore stride length and overtrack
When the naturally gaited horse is working in relaxed balance, with forward movement, and back to fore connected to core, the hind leg steps deeper under the body to produce maximum over track along with maximum depth of back stride equal to fore stride.

How back to fore connected by fore feels

Bringing it all together. Back to fore connected by core feels through. It feels balanced. It feels rhythmic. The chest and wither feel lifted. My horse moves forward without rushing into deep strides with shoulder scope. Most of all, the flat walk is SMOOTH.

So next time you hop on to ride your naturally gaited horse, think back to fore, connected by core.


I hope this is helpful. Let me know your thoughts by sending a message.

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Piaffe for the Naturally Gaited Horse

Naturally gaited horses can learn piaffe too

By Jennifer Klitzke

Classical French Dressage Master Philippe Karl believes that the upper level dressage movements like piaffe are not just for the talented horses. Average horses can learn them, too. (And so can naturally gaited horses!)

Piaffe for the Naturally Gaited Horse

Is it possible for the naturally gaited horse, particularily the naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse to learn advanced dressage movements like piaffe? Why not.

For the last few years I’ve been studying the work of Classical French Dressage Master Philippe Karl who believes that upper level dressage movements aren’t just for the talented horses. Average horses can learn them, too.

In addition, I have studied the book Another Horsemanship by the late Classical French Dressage Master Jean-Claude Racinet and the DVD Riding in Lightness created by his student Lisa Maxwell who is doing a fine job carrying on his legacy.

Together these teachings taught me the benefits of the counted walk and its impact on balance, softness, and engagement and empowered me to apply them to the naturally gaited horses I ride.

The photo above is me and Makana, my 14-year-old naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse who I ride barefoot and in a mild fulmer snaffle bit. We began exploring the counted walk a couple years ago and are now learning steps of piaffe coming from relaxed  engagement. It’s a dream come true to be learning piaffe and I never imaged that I’d be learning it on a horse that’s naturally gaited!

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Connection and the Naturally Gaited Horse

Connection and the Naturally Gaited Horse

Connection and the Naturally Gaited Horse

By Jennifer Klitzke

What does it mean to ride a naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse in connection? Did you know that connection can improve length of stride in the even four beat flatwalk and produce a better quality head nod in timing with the hind steps?

When I ride my naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse in connection at a smooth even four beat gait like the flatwalk, it feels like my horse and I are traveling as one in rhythm, relaxation, balance, forwardness and connection from her hindquarters through her body to a light snaffle bit contact. All this produces her best head nod at a flatwalk in even timing with her hind steps.

Did you know that rhythm, relaxation, connection, balance, and  forwardness are all elements of dressage to improve the quality of movement and won’t make your naturally gaited horse trot? It’s true!

For me, riding in connnection feels like riding that whole horse feeling!

On the other hand, when my horse and I aren’t in connection at a flatwalk, it feels like I am sitting in the middle of an independent front half and back half of a horse. Her back is hollow, she isn’t engaged from behind, her stride length isn’t deep under her body, she take short quick steps, she doesn’t feel light and soft on the bit, and her head nod is inconsistant and isn’t in timing with her hind leg steps.

The video below offers tips from lessons I have taken from my gaited dressage mentor Jennie Jackson. This video talks about riding the naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse in connection to improve the head nod in timing with the hind steps. I hope you find it helpful in your riding.

Video: Connection and the Naturally Gaited Tennessee Walking Horse

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How does the Naturally Gaited Horse develop Balance

How does the Naturally Gaited Horse develop Balance

How does the naturally gaited horse develop balance using dressage methods of training? How does the rider know when the horse is in balance? Have you ever wondered where balance is developed in the dressage pyramid of training?

Where is Balance Developed in the Dressage Pyramid of Training?

Dressage training pyramid

The dressage pyramid of training defines rhythm (regularity and tempo), relaxation (elasticity and freedom from anxiety), connection (acceptance of the bit through acceptance of the aids), impulsion (engagement and the desire to go forward), straightness (improved alignment and lateral suppleness on both reins), and collection (balance and lightness of the forehand from increased engagement). The bottom elements are introduced as one enters Introductory Level and the next highest elements of the pyramid are applied as one works through Training, First and Second Levels. Beyond Second Level all of the elements of the pyramid of training are applied and refined as one reaches the highest levels of dressage.

Competing dressage professionals select a promising young horse, and train and show the horse through the Levels as the horse matures with the hopes of reaching Grand Prix. Professionals say it takes between four and seven years to develop a horse to Grand Prix Levels of dressage.

What if you’re not a dressage professional? What if Grand Prix isn’t your goal? Do you only apply the bottom elements of the dressage pyramid of training with your horse if you only intend on showing Introductory and Training Levels? How does the horse and rider learn balance in Introductory and Training Levels? What does the dressage pyramid of training mean for dressage riders who don’t show? How does the naturally gaited horse develop balance by applying the dressage pyramid of training? Is the dressage pyramid of training the only way to apply dressage that helps the horse learn balance?

The Introductory Level of dressage focuses on forwardness with rhythm and relaxation in the working and long and low gaits of walk and trot or easy gait. Training Level adds contact to rhythm and relaxation as the horse and rider school in walk, trot or easy gait and canter. First Level encourages more contact with the introduction of the leg yield at a trot or easy gait and engagement as the lengthening gaits of trot or easy gait and canter are introduced.

It isn’t until Second Level that connection, impulsion, straightness and collection are introduced through the lateral exercises of shoulder-in and haunches-in and the transition of gaits: freewalk, collected walk, and medium walk; and collected and medium trot (or gait) and canter. These Second Level exercises, gait transitions, and collected gaits are terrific in helping the horse develop balance and help the rider discover the feeling of balance.

Think about it: If few riders ever reach Second Level and beyond how do the majority of horses develop balance? How do riders learn the feeling of balance? What does this mean for the naturally gaited horse in developing balance?

Discovering Balance through the Levels

Beginning in 1988 as an amateur dressage rider/trainer taking regular dressage lessons, it took me and my Trakehner-cross gelding seven years of working our way through Training and First Levels before our First Level scores were high enough to enter Second Level.

Being an amateur rider/trainer means I have a full-time job and riding is a hobby—not something I do 40-plus hours a week. For me to expect the same level of performance from myself as my dressage instructor is like signing up for a gym membership expecting to look like my aerobics instructor by the end of the month. That’s not realistic.

My five-year-old horse and I worked on forwardness in relaxation and rhythm in the working gaits of walk, trot and canter. I spent a lot of time riding 20-meter circles, encouraging my horse to stretch forward and down, and to seek the snaffle bit. As my horse reached for the bit, my arms followed him, and so did my body weight, which encouraged him to be on the forehand.

When my horse turned seven years old, we began to show Training Level. (Back in the day, they didn’t offer Introductory Level.) We showed Training Level until our scores were in the mid-60s. That took a couple more years.

Then showing First Level is when I began schooling Second Level movements, such as, the shoulder-in and haunches-in. These exercises began teaching my horse “balance” with relaxation, connection, impulsion, straightness, and collection, and I began to learn the “feeling of balance” as a rider.

Learning the Second Level movements was like starting over for me and my horse instead of a progression in our training.

For six years I had been driving my horse forward with rhythm and relaxation onto the forehand. Schooling the balancing exercises made this apparent. The shoulder-in and haunches in taught me a new language with my horse with the coordination and timing of my rein, seat and leg aids in order to communicate more carrying power vs. pushing power through the body, bending my horse on three tracks, feeling the whither raise up and capturing the back to front energy in a light accepting snaffle bit contact.

I believe that balance is key. Long and low stretching has its place, as long as the horse is in balance. Driving a horse forward in relaxation onto the forehand does not. Moments of long and low are wonderful for horses at all levels, yet it takes a discerning rider who knows the feeling of balance to know the difference between long and low on the forehand and long and low in balance.

That’s why I believe it is important for riders to learn a balanced riding position and the coordination and timing of rein, seat and leg aids in exercises that teach the naturally gaited horse balance as soon as the horse is mature enough. In hindsight, it makes no sense to me to train a horse long and low on the forehand and then retrain the horse to carry itself in balance later on.

In reflection of this, I wonder if the dressage pyramid of training is intended to be a one-attribute-added-to-the-next-attribute approach to training through the levels or if these attributes are meant to be combined from the get-go to create balance as the horse matures? Or if the dressage pyramid of training is meant for seasoned dressage professionals who can bring horses through a level each year until they reach Grand Prix? If the latter is the case, how do the majority of amateur riders and their horses schooling in Intro and Training Levels learn balance apart from the lateral exercises introduced in Second Level?

My question is, if the horse is mature enough, why wait to reach Second Level before discovering the amazing benefits the lateral exercises have on creating balance in the horse and help the rider learn the coordination of rein, seat and leg aids to discover the feeling of balance?

Balance and the Naturally Gaited Horse

Fast forward to 2007 when I purchased my first naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse Makana. She was just turning three years old.

Our first couple years, Makana and I applied the basics of dressage I had learned from lessons to establish rhythm, relaxation, balance, and forwardness at a walk. I joined a Walking Horse club and took in a handful of lessons from some of the members to help us establish the flat walk.

Then I began attending gaited dressage clinics when they came to my State. Among those I have learned from are Jennie Jackson, Larry Whitesell, Jennifer Bauer, and Bucky Sparks. All of them introduced shoulder-in at a walk because of the benefits it produced in the horse: softness, relaxation, and balance.

As I continue to study classical French methods of dressage, I’ve been freed from the rigid mindset of the only schooling the elements of the level of dressage I’m showing (or the level above that).

In fact, the requirements of showing no longer dictate my day-to-day training. Instead I seek to meet the needs of my horse. When I feel my horse and I are up for a competition, then we will accommodate the requirements of the show for the day. When we will return home, I return to the freedom of schooling my horse according to her needs.

Below are my thoughts in developing the naturally gaited horse.

Relaxation of the Mind and Body

As I continue to study the French dressage philosophy, I’d have to say that the relaxation of the horse’s mind and body (particularly the jaw and back) are key no matter what level we are working at.

My horse needs to be relaxed in the mind and body before I can expect any type of quality training, and I need to seek and maintain relaxation through our ride. Any time my horse gets tense in the body or nervous in the mind, I transition to something that restores her relaxation before continuing in our training.

Many times we transition to a very slow walk and do some steps of shoulder-in. This helps her refocus and gets her really soft in the jaw. Plus, the balance it creates improves whatever work we do next.

Begin Balancing Exercises Early

After relaxation of mind and body are established, I believe that balance is key. Long and low stretching has its place for horses at every level, as long as the horse is in balance.

That’s why I believe it is important for riders to learn exercises that teach the naturally gaited horse balance as soon as the horse is mature enough. It makes no sense to me to train a horse long and low on the forehand and then retrain the horse to carry itself in balance later on.

Learning a balanced riding position and the feeling of balance is the key. I didn’t learn the difference between long and low on the forehand and long and low in balance until my dressage instructor began teaching me Second Level exercises that helped my horse find balance, like the shoulder-in and haunches-in, and I began to learn the feeling of balance.

The shoulder-in and haunches-in required me to learn and apply a coordination and timing of my leg, seat, and rein aids. When my horse found balance, my instructor would affirm, “yes” and I would memorize the feeling.

I no longer wait until Second Level to teach the shoulder-in and haunches-in to my horses. These exercises are too important for establishing balance. Instead I let my horses tell me when they are ready to begin these exercises. When the horse has a good understanding of the rider’s rein, seat and leg aids, and is relaxed in the mind and body, that’s when I introduce the shoulder-in to the horse—first in-hand and then at a very slow walk.

After the horse is well established in the flat walk or easy gait, and the horse is able to perform the shoulder-in at a walk, then I introduce the shoulder-in at the gait for a few steps at a time.

I believe the best way to learn the feeling of balance as a rider and teach the naturally gaited horse balance is by learning exercises that produce balance like the shoulder-in and haunches-in through regular dressage lessons—even if the horse and rider aren’t showing or schooling Second Level.

Forwardness does not mean Hurried

Establishing a forward, relaxed rhythm in balance is the next step. I learned that forwardness and a hurried tempo are not the same thing. This is particularly important for the naturally gaited horse. Rushing a naturally gaited horse in flat walk, for instance, can produce shortened, quick steps that are on the forehand. For horses that have a propensity to pace, rushing tends to reinforce pace.

For the naturally gaited horse, I’ve learned that establishing a dog walk with maximum length of stride has been a great foundation in helping my horse ingrain a natural four beat flat walk with deep strides.

naturally gaited dressage with a Tennessee walking horse

Connection from Back to Front

In order to establish a forward, relaxed rhythm in balance, the naturally gaited horse needs connection from the rider’s use of seat, leg and rein aids in order to distribute the energy produced by the hindquarters  through the body through the head nod to a light accepting contact with a snaffle bit.

Forwardness with connection will produce steps from the hindquarters that are deeper under the body, longer in length from hind foot to hind foot, and produce a quality head nod in timing with the hind leg steps.

I’m curious to know your experiences in learning the feeling of balance and how your naturally gaited horse learned balance. What exercises taught you and your horse balance?


I hope this is helpful. Let me know your thoughts by sending a message.

Visit website: NaturallyGaitedHorse.com
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