Tag Archives: dressage

From the “Judges View” by Debi van Wyk

In this series we are going to look at some judges tips on how to increase your scores in your         dressage tests.

We will start with a few tips to work on before the actual tests.

The most important thing to mention is that the horse’s training is as per the training scale.

Straightness Training

There are 3 phases in the training scale.

training

Our overall aim is to ensure that the horses are through from behind to the front – not front to back.

The horse is through when it allows the riders aids from back to front, thus achieving suppleness and impulsion.

  • Practise riding tests at home. If your horse anticipates, break up the movements or ride the test backwards. It is very important to practise running through the movements in sequence to be able to keep your horse relaxed and focused and for you to get used to the speed at which the movements happen. It’s very different to training where you can do a transition etc. when it feels correct and you have the correct preparation. Having to execute movements at specific markers is a whole different ball-game.
  • Know your test, do not rely on a caller. Have an understanding of the rules and errors of course. These maybe downloaded from the Dressage South Africa website:
    (http://www.dressagesa.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Dressage-SA-National-Dressage-Rules-2014.pdf)
  • Corners, transitions and half halts are your best friends.
  • It’s important to ride corners well as it helps us create more power through increased engagement, maintaining rhythm and improving the horses balance. Corners are the preparation for subsequent movements, e.g. lengthen trot/canter.
  • If we don’t ride good corners, our horse can dive over the inside or outside shoulder, we can lose rhythm and impulsion or our horse will shorten his stride and rush through, leaving the corner on the forehand and thus loosing preparation and balance for the next movement.
  • In Prelim and Novice the corners are not ridden as deeply as in the more advanced tests, as the horses are not yet strong or balanced enough to create the engagement needed for deep corners.
  • For the Prelim and Novice horse think of corners as quarter circles. This will keep your fluency and rhythm.
  • There are 3 steps to riding a correct corner: a small quick half halt before the corner, riding forward through the corner (from your inside leg towards your outside hand, which will engage the horses inside hind leg) and then a rebalancing half halt on exiting the corner. This will ensure the horse is balanced, straight and prepared for the next movement.
  • Transitions are the difference between gait e.g. walk to trot, trot to canter, canter to walk etc. But there are also transitions within the gaits e.g. medium trot to extended trot, extended canter to collected canter etc.
  • The half halt is the most important aid and is necessary to ride all movements if you are to successfully influence the horse with invisible aids. You need it the most before you do anything else as the half halt is first to tell your horse “listen, something is changing and coming, sit on your hind legs and balance to be ready for me to ask it,” For example, the horse can’t do a good shoulder-in if you don’t prepare it in the corner, sitting him back with a half-halt.
  • A half-halt will not work if the rider is not in a balanced position on the horse and will be particularly ineffective if the rider is tight and cannot feel what the horse is doing. So the horse will not feel the action of the rider’s back and gets strong into the rider’s hand.
  • Half halts are normally executed in preparation for a transition.
  • The half-halt in dressage is the balancer, the reinforcer, the reminder, the rejuvenator, the engager, and the tool to draw the horse’s attention back to work.
  • The major role of the half-halt in dressage is to refine the transitions and the half-halt should not be used in a way that it keeps the horse behind the bit.
  • According to Carl Hester “the half-halt is a bracing of the back, a halt and release that must be made within a stride and for the elite rider made completely invisible.
  • A rider with an effective half-halt will execute a moment where they will stop/start without losing the forward impulsion and frame,” he said. “A half-halt should be completed in half a stride”.
    Ingrid Klimke says “close your legs to engage the hind legs of the horse and step more under the centre of gravity, then close both fists, not hold against the horse, just close them.”
  • Yet, we still see many riders who instead of perfecting the half-halt with their seat, pull on the reins, shortening the horse’s neck more and more until he submits to being pulled around the dressage arena.
  • Nuno Oliveira didn’t use the term half-halt, but knew that the rider must learn over time to use their seat, back, breathing, and feeling, to guide the horse. “Use hands and legs sparingly, and maintain balance through the seat”.
  • To establish the art of lightness, one must be able to maintain and balance that lightness with an effective and subtle half-halt, and until the rider can effectively carry out this process, well: “No half-halt, no dressage!”

Now we will look at some important points to adhere to in the warm-up arena:

  • Pass left shoulder to left shoulder.
  • When riding at a slower pace, take the inside track thus allowing horses at a faster pace the outside track.
  • When removing boots, adjusting tack, drinking water, talking to trainer etc. do this outside of the arena.
  • It’s considered bad form for your trainer to be in the arena.
  • Bridle numbers are to be on the left hand side of your horse, either on the bridle or numnah.

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SA Young Dressage Horse Series

SAYHS Logo 2016

In an effort to bring young dressage horse classes in South Africa up to the level of the FEI Young Dressage Horse classes, Howarth & Riders Dressage, with approval from Dressage South Africa, presents the South African Young Dressage Horse Series 2016. Through the exposure of the horses and the education of riders by our local and international judges, we aim to uplift the standard of South Africa’s young horses parallel to that of the FEI standard. This is a National series and in 2016 Gauteng, the Western Cape and KwaZulu Natal are holding qualifiers. It is hoped that in 2017 more provinces will join into the series and that the series will encourage greater participation in dressage and grow the sport as a whole.
 

Introducing Ourselves

Our motivation for promoting a young horse series is due to Simone Howarth’s experiences with the national and international young horse circuit in Europe with her horse, Show Special, then ridden by Zilla Pearse, along with Simone’s current work and interest in producing various local young horses through her pupils.
Mickey van der Merwe, a pupil of Simone’s, became involved with the scribing and scoring of the Young Horse classes at the South African Dressage Championships, where she was highly commended by the international judges for her efficiency and high level of competence.
It became apparent at the South African Dressage Championships that a dedicated team was needed to run and organise a young horse series and we at Howarth & Riders Dressage became interested in taking this on board.

Format of the Series

There are four different age categories: 4 year old, 5 year old, 6 year old and 7 – 9 year old classes. Frequently at CDI shows overseas there is a Small Tour for 7 – 9 year olds. We appreciate that in South Africa, as with all the other age categories, PSG and Inter I is a level or two above what the average horse here, of that age, is capable of. Therefore, after consultation with DSA, the 7 – 9 year olds ride a Medium test. The advantage of including the 7 – 9 year olds is that these young horses compete against their peers rather than against older school masters in the same class.
The 4, 5 and 6 year old classes are judged like the FEI Young Horse classes, with marks being given for walk, trot, canter, submission and general impression. The 7 – 9 year olds are judged and scored as a normal, complete tests, as they are in the 7 – 9 year olds at CDI shows. An essential part of the series is the aim to educate and uplift the level of young horses being produced in SA. Therefore, at the end of each test, feedback on the horse’s performance from the judges is given to the rider and the public over a loud speaker. This helps to engage the spectators and to assist the rider as to how the horse’s training is progressing and in what areas improvement can be made. This public feedback also displays transparency and assists with understanding of the scoring system and of what the judges are looking for in a future top level dressage horse.
Throughout the course of the series the tests increase in difficulty within the grade for the age group, cumulating in the highest test of each grade being ridden at the championship show (with the exception of the 7-9yr olds, whose highest test used will be Medium 2 or 3).

The grades are:

4 Year Olds: DSA Prelim 2013
5 Year Olds: DSA Novice 2010
6 Year Olds: DSA Elementary 2010
7 – 9 Year Olds: DSA Medium 2010
Each participating province is organising a minimum of 3 qualifying shows throughout the calendar year, cumulating in a Provincial Championship show. As a requirement for the Provincial Championship show, horse and rider combinations must compete in at least 2 of the qualifying shows. The top 5 horse and rider combinations of each age group at the Provincial Championships will be filmed. The videos of the top three in each age group in each province will go forward to the National Championship. The videos will be sent to two FEI Young Horse Judges in Europe along with being sent to two judges in SA. The accumulation of all of the judge’s marks will result in a National Champion for each age group. This series is being run as unaffiliated classes, where no points gained will be added to the horse’s grading points. Horses and riders competing in the series must be registered with DSA but will not be required to ride within its current DSA grade.

Sponsorship and Prizes

Arco360 are very kindly sponsoring the rosettes for the whole series along with sponsoring the costs of the videoing of each of the Provincial Championships. We are most grateful to Candice Hobday of Hobday Equestrian Enterprises for her support of the series.

ARCO Rosette