101 Longeing and Long Lining Exercises: English & Western
By Cherry Hill
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* Fancy footwork
* Whip works
* Pitching a wave
* Turn on the forehand
* Sidepass
* Longeing section:
* Stop, look, and listen
* Outside turns
* Inside turns
* Whip talk Spirals
* Wagon wheels
* Bending tune-up
* Contact and collection
* Long lining section:
* Long line lingo
* Yin y ang
* Figure-8
* Serpentines
* Backing
* Cavalletti work
* Trail obstacles
Each of the exercises is laid out with a diagram, step-by-step instructions, and an explanation of its benefits. The exercises progress from the basic skills to more advanced ones, such as counter-canter and flying changes of lead. This book and its companion volume, Longeing and Long Lining the English and Western Horse: A Total Program, give you a solid foundation for helping your horse work in productive form.
Cherry Hill
Cherry Hill is an internationally known instructor and horse trainer and has written numerous books, including 101 Arena Exercises for Horse & Rider, Horsekeeping on a Small Acreage, How to Think Like a Horse, What Every Horse Should Know, and Horse Care for Kids. Visit her at www.horsekeeping.com, where you can find information on her books, DVDs, and horsekeeping knowledge.
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101 Longeing and Long Lining Exercises - Cherry Hill
Introduction
Ground training exercises are a blend of discipline, gymnastics, mental development, and dancing. They are essential links to all future training and riding.
The exercises in this book are organized by groups and presented in their approximate order of difficulty. Depending on your horse’s level and style of training and his natural abilities and inherent problems, however, you might find some of the elementary exercises challenging and some of the advanced exercises easy.
Remember, the quality of the performance is much more important than just getting through the exercise!
I cannot stress this enough. Take your time and do the simple things well before you tackle more complex maneuvers and patterns. First, study the exercises in your favorite chair and walk through them in your mind until they are going smoothly before you head out to the arena. That way you will reap the great benefits of pre-performance visualization.
Even if you don’t plan to perform the exercises in a particular section, due to tack or facility restrictions, be sure to read all the material in this book. It is presented in a progressive fashion and you will need to absorb it all in order to design your own personal training program.
Please read Longeing and Long Lining the English and Western Horse for a thorough understanding of horse behavior and learning, training principles, tack, and the ground training progression. That book provides the theory and explanation for the exercises in this one, and contains over 250 photos of horses learning many of the exercises described here. It’s Recommended Reading section lists other books you might want to consult.
As you set goals for yourself and your horse, remember that expression and attitude are more important than mechanics. When you work your horse on the longe line, aim to develop his gaits so that they are pure and unhurried but have plenty of energy from the hindquarters. If you allow a horse to rush or work with an uneven or impure rhythm, it will carry over to his saddle work. Influencing the tempo of a horse’s gaits on the longe line is one of the most difficult aspects of longeing. You must encourage energy and action from the horse by using your body language and the whip, while at the same time containing him with the action of your body and the longe line.
The Successful Training Session
For a successful training session, follow these guidelines:
• Turn the horse out for free exercise before the lesson.
• Warm up the horse with grooming and in-hand work.
• Start the lesson with something that the horse knows well.
• Be sure he is mentally and physically warmed up when you introduce the new work.
• Allow time for rest breaks, review periods, and a good cool down.
• Always try to end on a good note to preserve your horse’s self-esteem.
Obedience and the impulsion and purity of the gaits are the most important aspects of early longeing. Only after the horse has learned to be cooperative and move forward with energy and a consistent rhythm would you attempt to introduce the bridle and side reins.
How can you tell whether the work is progressing correctly?
1. Watch your horse from the center of your longe ring. Note rhythm, carriage, balance, frame, and relaxation.
2. Evaluate your own stance and movement and delivery of the aids.
3. Work regularly with a qualified instructor or trainer and ask for periodic evaluations. (See the Recommended Reading list, mentioned-above, for books on how to select and work with an instructor.)
4. Solicit the observational skills of a person experienced in ground training who can objectively report to you what he or she sees happening.
5. Have someone record your training sessions on videotape. Then watch the tape carefully with slow motion and freeze frame.
Ground Training Commands
Here’s my repertoire of ground training commands:
Walk on!
Higher pitch on Walk
and great inflection variation—used to start a horse from a standstill.
Ta-rot!
Higher pitch on Ta,
great inflection variation—used to trot a horse from a walk. When a horse is trotting, don’t use the Ta-rot
command; instead, adjust the trot with Easy
or Trot on
(described later in this list).
Waaaaaaalk
Drawling, soothing tone—used to bring a horse down to a walk from a trot or canter.
Trrrrahhhht
Low pitch with little inflection variation—used to bring a horse down to a trot from a canter/lope.
Whoa
An abrupt wo
with low pitch and punctuated end—used to stop a horse from any gait. Not to be used in a soothing, drawling manner (that would be Easy
), as you want a prompt stop.
Eeeee-asy
A soothing, drawn-out, middle-tone command—used for slowing a horse down within a gait or generally just calming a horse.
Let’s Go!
An energetic, brisk command with accent and rising inflection on the Go!
—used for getting the horse to canter or lope. Many people use Can-ter!
Trot On
Very similar in sound to Ta-rot,
except spoken with more even inflection and in a more medium tone—designed to get a horse who is trotting in a lazy manner to trot forward with more energy.
Baaaack
Another soothing, drawn-out word in low, even tones-—used during in-hand and long lining work to back a horse.
Tuuuurrrrrrn
A melodic, circular command that starts out on a relatively high pitch and has a round, falling inflection—used to change the horse’s direction when free longeing or longeing on a line with a cavesson or halter.
OK
spoken just like you would if someone asked you, Would you hand me that bridle?
and you say, OK, I will.
I use it with canter, OK, Lets Go!
and whoa, OK, Whoa.
This way the transitions are not so abrupt, the horse has a bit of time to prepare.
Uh!
A warning/reprimand noise that lets the horse know that you can see he is about to make a mistake, such as when he’s rushing at the trot, almost ready to break into a canter. This just gets the horse’s attention focused more on you.
Goooood,
Good Boy,
Good Girl
Spoken with all the pleasure and pride you feel when your horse has done something particularly well. Use praise but don’t overuse it.
Develop a feel and a sense for when things are going right and when they are going wrong by answering the following questions:
• Is there appropriate left to right balance in my horse? Or is he overbent to the inside or counterflexed to the outside of the circle?
• Do I feel a mental connection with the horse and can I feel a light, responsive contact through the longe line? Or is his attention elsewhere?
• Is the front to rear balance acceptable or is the horse heavy on the forehand, croup up, back hollow?
• Is the horse’s rhythm regular or does he speed up, slow down, or break gait?
• Is the horse relaxed or is he tense?
• If using a bit, is he on the bit, or above it or behind it?
• Is the horse cantering/loping on the correct lead?
• Is he performing a four-beat lope or canter?
• Is he trotting so slowly as to be walking in front and trotting behind?
• Is he rushing at the walk and performing a pacey walk?
In most of the exercises in this book, the illustration indicates work in one direction only. Be sure to perform every exercise in both directions until the performance is equal. This will help prevent one-sidedness in your horse and allow you to become more ambidextrous.
When your horse is ready to move out of a small training pen, conduct the sessions in a large area so the horse is not being held in position by round pen or arena rails. The true test of the training will come when you correctly perform these exercises in an unenclosed flat spot in your pasture!
Although it might seem that some exercises are more appropriate for a Western horse and others for an English horse, all horses can benefit from all the exercises. The bound up
dressage horse can be loosened up by some of the traditionally Western-style exercises. And the Western horse that is a little heavy on the forehand can benefit from the proper form and collection inherent in the English exercises. So, I invite you to experiment and improvise.
How many times should you repeat an exercise? This can vary from once or twice to infinity. With lead changes and backing, repetition often causes boredom and dullness and invites anticipation problems. Such maneuvers are best saved for the portion of the training session when the horse is thoroughly warmed up and prepared. Then you can ask for a few of these more advanced maneuvers. Transitions and circles, however, are the mainstay of your horse’s training program and should be repeated often.
What to do when things go wrong?
1. Review each component of an exercise. Refer to Longeing and Long Lining for tack and training theory.
2. It may be necessary for you to return to some in-hand exercises to establish forward movement, acceptance of contact, or response to positioning aids. You will often find that returning to simple work will give a horse confidence and improve his ability to understand the more complex exercises.
3. Perform an exercise that the horse does very well, such as the walk-trot-walk transition. Work on purity and form. Don’t think you are wasting your time because it would surprise you to know how few horse owners can perform this simple exercise perfectly.
4. Perform a simpler version of the exercise. If it is a canter pattern, try it at a walk or trot first.
5. Perform the exercise in the opposite direction. Sometimes, because of an inherent stiffness or crookedness in a horse, you will have difficulty with an exercise to the left but no problems to the right. Capitalize on this by refining your skills and the application of your aids in the good direction
and then return to the hard direction
with a renewed sense of what needs to be done. I often find that when I do work to the right, it improves work to the left.
6. By all means, if something is not working, do not repeat it over and over. Try something different!
VOICE COMMANDS
Along with body language (see Free Longeing), voice commands help you communicate with your horse. Carry-overs from a horse’s in-hand work to longeing and long lining are the voice commands for Walk,
Trot,
Whoa,
and Back.
Voice commands will be your link between longeing and riding. Since the body language you use during longeing won’t carry over when you are in the saddle, it’s nice to have a well-established set of voice commands to use during a horse’s first lessons under saddle. Particularly useful for first rides are Whoa,
Easy,
and Walk on,
so be sure to make a strong connection with these helpful commands.
To be effective, a particular voice command should be consistent each time it is used. It should be consistent in tone, inflection, volume, and of course, the word used.
Tone refers to the pitch of your voice, high and shrill or low and deep. It makes sense to use a higher pitched voice to encourage a horse to move faster and a lower voice to slow him down or command him to stop.
Inflection is the way your voice modulates as you speak a word or phrase. It is the rise and fall or singsong quality of your voice. The emphasis given to a command can be crisp or drawling. A drawn-out command is soothing; a sharp command is a reprimand.
By using a high pitch and a great variation in inflection in Ta-rot!
you sound as though you want the horse to move crisply forward.
Using a low pitch, a falling inflection with very little modulation variation works well for Whoa.
As for volume, it is not necessary or productive to shout commands at your horse. Horses have quite a good sense of hearing. They can hear commands in quite low volumes. In fact, the breaking patter
of experienced trainers is often just a muttering under the breath that human bystanders might not even be able to decipher but the horse understands clearly.
The word you choose to use for each voice command is really more significant for you than it is for the horse since you know what a word means but to the horse it is just a particular sound. It is okay if you choose to use nontraditional words for your voice commands, but try to choose words that are very different from each other and that sound
like what you want the horse to do. Decide ahead of time which words you will use as longeing commands, and practice on a tape recorder until you perfect them.
Terms Used in Ground Training Exercises
Track right Working along the rail clockwise, making right turns. Sometimes it’s confusing because when you come in the gate, you have to turn left to track right.
Track left Working along the rail counterclockwise, making left turns.
Stride One complete revolution of the horse’s legs in the footfall pattern of the gait in which he is performing.
Step One beat in a gait. There are several steps in each stride. A step may involve more than one leg.
Inside Inside refers to the inside of the bend of the horse’s body, which usually is also the inside of the round pen, circle, or arena. For example, when tracking to the right with normal bend, the inside is the right, which is the side toward the inside of the circle and the trainer. Outside is left.
Outside Outside generally refers to the outside of the bend of the horse’s body, which usually is also the outside of the circle.
Metric Equivalents
Average Length of Stride at Various Gaits
Horses vary greatly in their stride lengths, so the preceding and following information is average, approximate. It takes:
26 strides to trot a 20-meter (66-foot) diameter circle. (207-foot circumference)
13 strides to trot a 10-meter (33-foot) diameter circle. (103-foot circumference)
To work 50 feet down the long side, it takes:
9 strides at a working walk.
6 to 7 strides at a working trot.
5 strides at an extended trot.
5 to 6 strides at a working canter.
The horses and trainers in these exercise illustrations are not drawn to the scale of the arena or round pen. They are larger, for clarity of detail. It is suggested that all exercises be conducted in a 66-foot (20-meter) round pen and a 100-foot × 200-foot arena.
PART ONE
In-Hana Work
In-hand work is much more than getting a horse from point A to point B. It requires the development of physical skills by both horse and trainer. There must also be a mental connection between the horse and trainer for the lessons to progress well. In-hand work includes approaching, catching, haltering, handling the head, leading, turning, stopping, standing, backing, and much more.
There are certain exercises you should practice without your horse so that you become proficient with the ground training equipment and necessary body language.
As you progress through these exercises, choose movements that are natural and easy for you. Tailor the aids you will use to your own physique and personal training style.
When you begin the in-hand work with the horse, take the time to get really solid responses. It is much better to do simple things well than to bumble through advanced exercises in poor form. Take the time here. It will pay off.
In-hand work is suitable for any horse two months of age and older. (For more information refer to Longeing and Long Lining.)
Exercise 1
Fancy Footwork
If you practice the footwork necessary for ground training ahead of time, you will have a better chance of reacting appropriately when you have an untrained horse in front of you.
You generally have a driving foot and a restraining foot. The driving foot is the one nearest to the horse’s hindquarters. When a horse tracks left, it would be your right foot. Your restraining foot is nearest the head. When a horse tracks left, it would be your left foot. Either foot can be used to push the horse sideways or out onto a larger circle.
a. When you want to cause a horse