Training Tip: Lateral Flexion Is The Key To Vertical Flexion

 

Long before I even think of teaching a horse how to give vertically to the bit and collect, I teach him how to flex his head from side to side. Whenever a horse’s body is straight from his head to his tail, he’s practicing resistance. With that being said, once you start to teach your horse vertical flexion, don’t fall into the trap of completely ignoring lateral flexion. It’s important to constantly balance vertical flexion with lateral flexion. When you first start working with a horse, you do 100 percent lateral flexion. Then when you start to teach him vertical flexion, you might spend 10 percent of your ride on vertical flexion and 90 percent on lateral flexion. As the horse gets softer, you can gradually even the ratio out so that you’re working on 50 percent vertical flexion and 50 percent lateral flexion during the course of your ride.

More News

Back to all news

See All
FILES2f20152f012f0120_05.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Ensure a Safe Start With the Colt Starting Series

Clinton believes that the foundation you put in place during a colt’s first weeks under saddle sets the stage for…

Read More
0312_Tip

1 year ago

Training Tip: Draft Mare Is Not Flexing Well

Question: I have a 6-year-old draft mare that was broke by being used to pack and never learned the basics….

Read More
0126_Tip

5 years ago

Training Tip: Horse Terrorizes Other Horses in Turnout

Question: Our rescue currently has 16 horses on site that live in paddocks in groups of twos and threes. Thomas…

Read More
Phoenix_header_in-charge

5 years ago

Fundamentals With Phoenix: How to Train Your Human

Lesson 6: You’re in charge. Prove it. Need a quick plan of attack to derail your human’s efforts? Easy. Take…

Read More