Exercises for Horses:
Essential skills/traits of a good war horse:
Neck reining: Enhance performance through use of bosal
during training, use of steering stick for those resistant. Essential skills/traits of a good war horse:
Obedience - The horse must be completely obedient, willing to face scary obstacles, move into the correct position, stand when needed, and change gaits. Practice as if you want to compete in a Command Class. In fact, your trained war horse should be ready to go out and win this type of class, as well as Trail classes, based on the other training you will do.
The following exercises are suggested for training a horse for use in specific activities:
1) Heads course: Do sword
drills, Figure 8 (extensively), familiarity with weapons, free of distraction. Practice the pattern….always ride it the same
way. Understand that the horse may have
a tendency to weave a straight course….when start this straight run, which
should be practiced, establish that the run will be straight with strong leg
aids. Drill this so the horse
understands the difference.
2) Quintain: Practice long lance
familiarity, train the horse to travel straight, be responsive to leg pressure
(outside leg pressure essential), and train the horse to not respond to increased rider
leg pressure on inside leg which is natural when the rider strikes the
quintain. Teach the horse to not duck its head away from the quintain, thereby moving away
from it. Train for steady forward
motion.
3) Rings: Training for this is similar to the quintain, but train for consistent gait as
this is critical in this game. Especially at
trot and canter….even cadence is the key. Train for it. It helps to anticipate the movement of the lance tip
with relationship to the rings (or target).
Combat at Æthelmearc's 10th Anniversary event. |
5) Challenge courses-obstacles:
Desensitization exercises are paramount. Expose the horse to a lot of obstacles and scary
things. The other essential skill needed for this is
obedience. The horse needs to respond to leg
aids, moving close to obstacle. Ride
directly alongside, stop at the point where your body is next to the object in order to eliminate
the need to reach out for the obstacle. The outside
leg maintains the horse’s closeness to the obstacle while reaching out (which
inadvertently puts pressure on inside leg).
6) Archery: Train against desensitization
to most general distractions and noises.
Start shooting next to the horse. Once mounted, practice making a lot of
noise on the horse before attempting bow work. Horses trained to accept spear throwing will readily accept the sound of
the arrow hitting the target.
7) Barding and decorations: Sacking out exercises and stable blanket wearing prepare a horse for wearing most caparisons or barding. Hang bells and wind chimes in the barn, near
stalls, near entrances to barn, ringing them especially at feeding times. Play with ringing bells as an obstacle while mounted.
8) Jousting: Besides
the use of leg aids to maintain straightness on approach and position in the lists, the
most important thing the horse has to learn is to charge another horse. Horses low in the herd order and submissive
have a lot of difficulty with this. Aggressive horses or those higher in the herd hierarchy don’t have as
much a problem with it. Most of the
time, we ride alongside another horse going in the same direction. Horses like
to go with others; it is against their nature to charge towards another horse as we do in jousting. In the ring, we usually all ride in the same direction. Change this up and ride in opposite directions. Don't let the horse veer out when approaching another horse, but maintain outside leg pressure to keep the horse going straight. Set
a ground rail, and ride, starting with the walk and moving up to canter, in
opposing directions with another horse, without weapons.
Rex standing quietly and modeling his new caparison. |
Exercises for Riders
Basic principles:
Practice stretching and develop core strength. Do exercises for abdominal strengthening, such
as crunches. Also focus on leg strengthening for strong leg aids, so your legs don’t
tire. Leg aids and yielding are
essential to positioning the horse and maintaining position while executing
certain actions. For example, the outside
leg maintains the horse’s proximity to an obstacle while the rider reaches out (which
inadvertently puts pressure on inside leg). Do arm strengthening exercise to build forearm and upper body strength for
handling long lances.
Balance exercises on horseback are very helpful. For example, during the heads course with a sword, as the horse weaves,
the rider leans to the target to strike and tend to press the horse’s inside
for balance which pushes the horse away from the target. Work on balance and independent seat so that
you can move your upper body without influencing the horse’s balance
(show/explain the lean-horse shifts to
compensate demo) and inadvertently give the horse leg aids/signals.
Specific exercises: Demonstrate toe touch, reach to sky and butt, leg
lifts and scissor-leg, twisting in saddle, complex hand movements while riding.
Weapons handling:
Practice what you want to do on horseback on the ground. Spear throw from the ground, practice
archery, do sword drills such as the figure eight. Be familiar with your weapons. Train like the warrior you want to be.
Riding obstacles:
This is by far the most important practice you can do. You
need to train yourself to be able to tackle a variety of challenges. Set up a field of obstacles to train your
horse as well as yourself. Be creative
and imaginative with these obstacles. The better you both are at this, the better prepared you will be for all
types of equestrian skill tests. The
more the horse is exposed to, the more obedient it will be when you compete.
Practice several steps: Look at the task, assess the skills needed, walk
up to or approach the obstacle. For those tasks where it is appropriate---Stop
squarely beside the obstacle, with your leg next to the obstacle -not behind or
in front of you causing you to over-reach, exerting leg pressure and asking
your horse to move away from the obstacle.
Execute the obstacle before allowing your horse to move on. For tasks done in motion-ensure your horse
keeps a steady pace throughout the task. Consistent training of you, the rider, as well as the horse, will result in a skilled pair who will be successful in the SCA equestrian arena. this is true if you are competing in skills tests like the Ring Tilt or Quintain, or in combat such as Mounted Combat. Every hour spent in the training ring will be well worth the time and effort.
Results of hard training- Æthelmearc King and Queen's Equestrian Champions 2014. |
No comments:
Post a Comment