This is a very helpful article. I had heard parts of this idea, but it is good to see the steps and the purpose all in one article. Thanks
This article was very useful. I just began riding a green horse, who has problems cantering as she is very unbalanced, so I will definitely try some of these exercises.
This was EXACTLY what I was looking for. So well written, and incredibly informative as to the how and why. Thank you!
I'm going to try this. My daughter has a paint gelding that just turned 6yrs. and still doesn't have a balanced canter.
My 6yr old foundation App.will not lope on the right lead...When i ask him to canter..he throws his head up & around & when i push him on he just stops..I have ben working him now for 2 months & his getting to the point were he just does not want to canter at all.....what is wrong ??
Cindy: It could be that your balance/seat are the problem. This may sound harsh, but I have reason to believe that about 98% of training issues are the rider's fault, not the horse's. Maybe you used to tense up and slam into the saddle as soon as he started cantering, causing him to stop, and by now he's reluctant to even try, because it's hurts. (I have that problem, unfortunately). It could also be that his saddle/back/something else hurts when he canters, and the pain is, again, not worth it to him. If this gets worse, you should contact a pro trainer to check it out and work on him before he's ruined.
Thank You for this awesome artcle! I finally understand clearly how to correctly train my Friesian to canter on his own balanced and collected ~ Yea!