Unlock Potential
The Rider
Riders shape a horse’s life every single day. Good riders listen for small answers, reward quickly, and stop before fatigue turns into resistance. In the end, the rider becomes the horse’s guide, guardian, and partner—responsible for both performance and welfare. That influence must be earned, never taken.
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Build a Stable Seat as a Rider: Fix Your Position Without Pulling the Reins
A stable seat does not happen by chance. I create it with a stable pelvis, elastic hips, and a clear rhythm. When my core supports the motion, my hands stop grabbing. My horse then swings through the back and breathes out.
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Center your seat while riding: stop blocking its back with your Weight
Tight contact and a stiff back often start with rider imbalance. I lower my center, soften my eyes, and breathe into my pelvis. Then my seat bones even out, my hands quiet down, and it starts to swing and step through again.
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Breathing in the Saddle: My Breath as a Precise Riding Aid
Breathing is not just fitness. It is a riding aid that shapes my posture, my contact, and my horse’s confidence. When I breathe low and steady, tension drops. As a result, my horse moves freer, and my hands feel lighter.
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Stop Starring while Riding: The fastest focus shift I teach myself
When my ride feels tense, I change my eyes before I change my aids. I widen my gaze, soften my focus, and feel my seat settle. Consequently, my horse often swings more freely and the contact steadies. Use this reset to stop staring while riding and regain calm rhythm.
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Your Horse Shows Back Pain Under Saddle: Stop These Common Riding Errors
If your horse feels tight, hollow, or unhappy under saddle, start with your seat. I explain signs, biomechanics, and practical self-checks that soften the back and improve rhythm. Learn how to stop causing back pain in my horse while riding—and when to involve saddle fitters or vets.
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How I Build up my Horse’s Suppleness: A simple 10-minutes routine
Calm rhythm and soft contact help me build up my horse’s suppleness. With frequent changes of line, transitions, circles, and a few easy lateral steps, stiffness melts instead of fighting back. Soon the back swings, the breath stays quiet, and the body feels elastic, balanced, and ready.
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Rider workout plan for a balanced seat
Strong riders protect their horses. When I get tired, my posture collapses and my aids arrive late, so my horse must rebalance and its back can suffer. This guide shares a simple Rider workout plan for a balanced seat, built on stamina, core control, mobility, and balance.
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Diagnose lameness in horses: My practical field check
Lameness can hide in tiny asymmetries, yet it changes comfort, performance, and long-term soundness. In this guide, I show a practical way to spot red flags, compare movement, and know when to call your vet. You will learn simple checks that bring clarity and confidence.
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Horse Welfare Rules Every Rider Should Follow: Charter for the Horse
The Charter for the Horse reminds me to always put the horse’s welfare first. It defines ethical principles for responsible care, training, and partnership. By respecting each horse’s needs, emotions, and individuality, I create harmony, trust, and lasting wellbeing — before, during, and after every competition or career.
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General Welfare and Care at Home
As a horse owner, I carry full responsibility for the wellbeing of my horse. The principle that every animal deserves […]
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Welfare of the Horse – Carrying Capacity and Fitness
Understanding horse carrying capacity and fitness helps me protect my horse’s health and performance. By staying within safe weight limits, I prevent strain, promote balance, and strengthen our partnership. A fit rider and a well-conditioned horse move in harmony, ensuring comfort, longevity, and true respect for equine welfare.
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Welfare of the Horse – Care at Competitions
Caring for my horse at competitions means taking full responsibility for its safety, comfort, and health. I plan every journey, check fitness, ensure safe stabling, and adapt to weather conditions. My responsibility to ensure my horse’s well-being at competitions defines respect, empathy, and true horsemanship at every moment.
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Welfare of the Horse – Handling and Training
My responsibility for the well-being of my horse in terms of handling and training begins with knowledge, empathy, and consistency. I build trust through calm handling, patient training, and respect for natural behavior. Every step is aimed at protecting the horse’s body and mind while building strength, confidence, and a lasting partnership.
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How the Dressage Training Scale Makes Every Horse Better
The Scale of Dressage Training guides horse and rider through six progressive steps: rhythm, suppleness, contact, impulsion, straightness, and collection. Each level builds harmony, balance, and power. By developing these elements systematically, I help my horse move with ease, trust, and lightness — the essence of classical dressage.
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How to Fix a Broken Connection: Circle of Aids Checks That Work
True connection starts in the circle of aids: leg creates impulsion, seat shapes the swing, hands receive and return energy. When the loop stays unbroken, the horse lifts his back, softens to contact, and carries himself. I ride with timing, not pressure, every stride for calm confidence.
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Horse Share Agreement: Clarity and Safety for Every Rider
When I enter a horse share, I always make sure to have a clear Horse Share Agreement. It’s more than paperwork — it’s protection. Even with trusted owners, misunderstandings happen. A written agreement defines duties, riding days, and payment terms clearly, ensuring fairness and transparency.
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Communicate with Horses: The Power of Your Voice and Tone
Horses are incredible listeners. They recognize familiar sounds instantly, even footsteps. Their hearing is precise and tied to memory. While they don’t understand words, they feel tone. When I communicate with horses, my voice becomes the bridge of trust. Through tone and rhythm, they sense my message.