Making a horse
run faster is part of the training process where you teach the animal to be
responsive to your touch. Horses learn by repetition. Your training methods
will always include pressure and release. In order to teach your horse to go
faster, you must apply contact in a consistent and reasonable way. This would
be true whether you are working with your horse in the round pen, on a lunge
line or while mounted. For your own safety, be sure that your horse knows how
to stop. You do not want to be riding a horse that does not know how to apply
his brakes.
1 Get your horse
tacked up. Once he is fully tacked, take him to the arena and mount.
2 Warm up your
horse. Going from a walk to a hand gallop is the equivalent of getting out of
bed in the morning and breaking into a run down the driveway. Your horse needs
an appropriate warm up for his muscles. Start off with your regular routine of
bending, flexing and stretching him while transitioning up and down within the
gaits. This means working in circles, serpentines, and cutting across the
diagonal at a walk, trot and canter.
3 Transition the
gaits. While you are warming up, use your aids to cue her to slow down. If your
horse is going at the working trot, ask for a bit more collection by half
halting. Your horse should respond instantly to this cue and collect her body
by shortening her stride. This collection and shortening tell you that she is
listening. Now ask her for a working canter. Halfway around the arena, give her
a half halt to see if she responds by shortening her canter stride. Now ask her
to come down from the canter to a full halt. Squeeze your hands around the
reins, sit up straight and put all your weight deeply into the saddle while
closing your legs around the horse's barrel. She should respond by giving you a
nice halt. If she is listening to you, ask for more.
4 Speed him up.
Ask for a working canter. On the long side of the arena, give your horse the
cue to lengthen his stride by applying pressure, squeezing with your calves and
heels. He should immediately respond by increasing his speed and lengthening.
Make sure that your hands are soft on the reins and allow your horse to move
forward. If you hold him back, he will have nowhere to go. If your horse does not
increase his speed, apply your spurs by gently pricking upwards into his sides
or giving his hindquarters a quick tap with the crop.
5 Ask for a
greater increase. Your horse should now be in a hand gallop, which means that
she is galloping but is well within your control. To ask for a full run, apply
more leg pressure until your horse is galloping full speed. Be careful that you
ask for speed increases only on the long sides of the arena and that as you
come into corners and sides, you collect your horse by shortening his stride.
When you come to the long side, ask for another increase. Use your spurs and
riding crop if your horse does not listen to your request. Expect an immediate
response from leg pressure. If she does not listen, apply the spurs or crop.
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