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Colleen Brook brings us three exercises
you can use to get your jumper
'pole literate.

The first exercise: Trot poles to a
cross rail with a rail behind it. There will be four trot poles, and
they will be the same distance as you would normally have cavalettis or
any other trotting pole distance, which is 1.20m to 1.40m for the longer
striding horse. The distance between the last pole and the jump is about
2.7m and that doesn't seem to vary much, unless your horse has an
extremely big stride. If you feel that the horse has to hop and finds it
quite difficult, the horse is telling you he is not very comfortable, so
make it a little longer. The cross keeps the horse in the middle, and
the rail at the back just makes for a little bit more of a jump on the
end. You can start most green horses with a cross, and put the rail
behind it once they get the hang of it.
Method: You will need to trot your
horse through the rails a couple of times to feel whether the horse is
comfortable. This is an exercise which requires the horse to be going
quite actively forward into your hand, because with the jump at the end
of the poles, if the horse's trot doesn't have enough impulsion they
will find that they are not making the distance between the poles and
the idea of the exercise is to really work them through the poles; the
jump on the end is something to focus on as well, for both rider and
horse. What the four poles do is teach the horse to set itself, just
like cavalettis; and with the jump on the end, any horse that wants to
rush or evade in some way, will find it a lot harder. Instead of the
horse just running through the poles, they learn to set themselves and
measure the distances more carefully. Rider's Position: The rider's
position through all this can be a rising trot, or as I prefer, what we
call a crutch three point position, which is a very light seat but
sitting; forward, but sitting. I like this better because it really puts
the emphasis on the rider's lower leg, balancing so that they don't hang
onto the horse's mouth too much.
Problems and how to solve them:
Sometimes when you start, you'll find that your horse goes through well
some of the time, and sometimes he doesn't, that's only to be expected
until he gets the hang of it. However if the horse is going fast and is
trying to skip through the poles for no good reason, then the idea is to
put the jump up a bit more slowly, always within the horse's comfort
zone, because when the horse starts to get a bit worried he will try and
get too fast through the poles. It is also difficult for the rider when
the jump gets up, to stay steady. That's the hard part. That's what we
have to practice, keeping very steady through the poles. Some horses
naturally don't like it. Some horses find the trotting thing hard when
the jump starts to get up a bit, and I'm talking about one metre, then
they start to get a bit anxious. So then you just bring the fence down
until they become comfortable again and then you just stay with that
height until they really learn the lesson well. It might take three
sessions, it might take six sessions, some horses will do it well in one
session.
Results: This exercise teaches the
horse to remain steady in front of a fence. It reminds the rider how to
ride forward into the hand, into the contact. It's also an exercise to
make the horse pick up its feet and focus on the fence. There are two
things to focus on, the poles and the jump. It's good position practice
for the rider, they can practice their rein release over the jump. It's
a very old European style exercise and I think that most of these sort
of exercises are very useful. They are in most of the top training books
and videos, but we tend to slide over them because they are what we
might consider to be old fashioned but horses are still horses. This
exercise is the next step after cavalettis. I really like cavalettis,
and this is another step on the day that you don't want to do a lot of
jumping but you want to do something, this a nice little exercise to
play around with, and you can build the fence at the end, as high as you
like. It has a very good effect. It really works the horse, really makes
them use their power out of the trot, because the four poles keep the
horse steady as opposed to one. They can sort of run beside or over one
pole and make a bid at the fence still, and canter and do all the wrong
things over one pole; the four poles keep them steady. I use a cross
rail with a rail behind it to make it that little bit harder. I think it
is a very essential part of your training, as jumpers have to be 'pole
literate!'
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