Stute blockiert sobald sie in Anlehnung soll?
Habe seit kurzem ein neues Pferd. Anfangs war alles Tippi Toppi, weil ich mich noch nicht wirklich reiten getraut habe, also sie lief ordentlich aber ich habe nicht allzu viel gefordert. Wir sind auch etwas gesprungen, alles kein Problem. Auch im Unterricht lief sie mir brav, nur wir hatten schon da mit der Anlehnung zu kämpfen, da sie eher in vorwärts abwärts dahin dudeln wollte. Die letzten Tage wurde es dann schlimmer. Sobald ich sie aufgenommen hatte und mehr wollte als nur vorwärts abwärts, hat sie blockiert, ist mitten aus dem Galopp stehen geblieben und hat gebockt. Gestern saß meine Reitlehrerin drauf und sie ist richtig massiv geworden. Meine Reitlehrerin hat sie natürlich im Griff gehabt, aber sie meinte auch dass es wirklich schwierig werden könnte. Beim springen läuft sie mir auch absolut brav, solang ich sie nicht versammeln möchte etc. Ihr Sattel passt 100 Prozentig, wir waren schon im Gelände wo sie wirklich ein Goldstück ist und auch so ist sie total lieb. Jetzt versuchen wir es mit beritt und viel Unterricht. Hat irgendjemand Erfahrung gemacht mit einem Pferd welches blockiert sobald man arbeiten will? Oder Tipps? Z. B wenn die Situation ist, dass sie wieder stehen bleibt sobald man sie mehr aufnimmt. Und es ist natürlich keine Lösung sie in ihrem vorwärts abwärts Trott zu lassen!!
That could be a toothache. Especially since she refuses so violently if you want to take the reins. When was the dentist last there?
Didn’t that happen during preparation?
Of course you checked not only the saddle before, but also checked whether the bite fits well, you let the dentist look in or. Teeth is made and you have given the horse an osteopathic treatment. It was also looked as if everything was all right with the hooves. You have also spoken to the previous owner, and you have to know if something has already occurred there.
So if it is excluded that the horse has health issues or otherwise is affected in any way, then yes – lessons and riding are a good idea.
That sounds like pain, a physio and possibly 2. Sattler and dentist would definitely let me check out what’s happening.
From a comment from you came the subject Testing on… Horses Testing didn’t. They lack this part in the brain. They are questioning your leadership quality, but it doesn’t seem to be in a sudden position and begging.
Sometimes it also helps not to ride the horse for one or two weeks and to long reasonably and to do something else. Handcrafted work can also be done on or simply walk. I can also imagine that the horse “sour” is ridden in the square.
The whole thing is probably less solved with “packing”, but rather with letting go and listening.
I’d let her check out once. Where was she before?
Don’t get frustrated! I have a totally sensitive mare- as soon as I’m frustrated, she’s frustrated and jammed. Do you feel insecure on the horse?
What does your riding teacher say?
My riding teacher thinks something’s wrong. Either you’re hurting what she doesn’t believe, as she jumps absolutely brav as I said, and also runs in the ground brav on the train, etc, or she has accustomed that she can laugh nicely on the forehand. She can be incredibly much, so she can also learn L lessons somewhere in her life she should have run reasonably.
Our plan is to look for the next few weeks to see if it is going to be better, so it’s just doing this because it wants to test or if it really is a bigger problem somewhere. I would also have no problem with concentrating on jumping more when she has fun, but it is absolutely unhealthy for her to walk around on the forehand and in front of all you can’t jump if it doesn’t work.
I just don’t know how to work with her alone. When my riding teacher is there, I feel a hundred percent safe and don’t let me buy the cutting edge, but if I’m alone, I’m often clumsy.
Towards down has nothing to do with lashing, but is correctly ridden quite exhausting for the horse. Jumping is certainly not more gentle than “smoothing” for the front legs – especially if the horse is not gymnastized in between.
I’m afraid you should change the riding instructor 😕
NOT TEST. They can’t. DA’s horse responds to suboptimal riding.
she can also teach L lessons
that’s not art. As Rainer KLimke said so beautiful: it doesn’t matter that a horse is a lesson, but it just depends on how a lesson is going.
My RL quickly introduced the shoulder to my mare as a straight exercise. Trotdzdem, my mare wasn’t M-lection.
only we had to fight with the idea, as they were more likely to towards towards wanted.
I don’t think you know what the correct attachment means, or what the most correct V/A means. V/A does not mean that the horse fell apart on the forehand. A horse that goes correctly in V/A is quite well trained, otherwise it could not. This includes correct muscles and is not to be reached at all before the end of A Dressur.
And as long as you have to fight for the horse to go along, the horse is by no means in line. The correct attachment is achieved with the slightest help, when the horse is ridden so far. To crush the horse in shape has nothing to do with attachment. It is the horse that produces the attachment, not the rider.
I think your horse is a correction horse. I hope your helper can do this! My friend bought himself a pretty Trakehnerstute two years ago. E-Dressur and E-Springen place. My girlfriend had shown video recordings of the riddled horse and my riding teacher very proudly. However, she only concealed her head and called “Oh ever”. Nevertheless, she didn’t tell her about the purchase, only told her that the horse had to be retrained from zero. The whole house had to be rehabilitated and rebuilt. Now after two years the horse goes a real A and also a decent forward – down.
In order to get the horse from the pre-handle to the attachment, you never use the hand.
Here the backhand has to be activated.
Remember, when you go down the back, it’s coming up.
And then SUCH the horse the lust and the rider grants it.
My experience with horses that are trained decently and are so prone that they have massive pain. (Hinter strap, neck strap, toothache, bad saddle…)
Or they are not sufficiently trained and therefore simply do not have enough strength to carry themselves.
Grade, if you’ve only had the horse recently, I’d have it thoroughly examined – not that you’ve been cheated.
By the way, it’s such a thing with the “forward-down” ever because it is rarely really correctly ridden. In many places, the horses tend to roll in or lashing simply with a long neck. Correctly ridden, the horse also takes a proper load on the backhand and enters beautifully under with nose front and not too deep. If you can really ride the horse correctly, I would think of a problem in the neck (slip bag, arthrosis, front part of the necklace…)
Can she even (muscularly) keep the intrusive? What does her hull-carrying apparatus say, her back and, above all, her belly?
we’re talking about attachment and not execution.