After over a week out of the saddle, it sure felt nice to
hop on Checkers for a lesson last night. I’m riding with a fun group of middle
aged ladies right now, which is a nice change up from riding with kids for the
first few months here. The kids are fun and inspiring in their own way, but it’s
sure nice to ride with like minded adults!
I’m probably the weakest link in the current lesson, which
is exactly what I need. While I’m not a competitive type, I’m also not the type
who’s comfortable having others make compromises for me. As a result, I’m forced a little outside my comfort zone.
Checkers and I had one slightly hairy moment where I just read things wrong and
got the wrong angle on a bending line mid course and messed up the pace.
Checkers ended up taking a super long one over the middle jump and where we
should have had a two stride we had me flailing and a one stride creating
another long one followed by a runout at the next. In the end, we had to try it
another two times to really get a feel for it, but I left feeling confident and
comfortable with it and excited to do it again! I love that our coach puts a
lot of difficult questions in our courses to make you plan ahead and ride super
accurately – her method isn’t at all about raising the jumps as you progress,
it’s more about creating more complicated questions. The intermediate lesson I
ride in still keeps things around the 2’-2’3” mark for the most part, with the
odd 2’6”. The next lesson group up is a big move up height wise to 2’6” to 3’
but they share the same courses so there won’t be many surprises there if and
when the time comes.
I suck at picture taking, so here's a Throwback Thurday shot - a lesson with Lainey in 2012 |
Flatwork was fun. We
worked a lot on accurate transitions, doing an exercise of 15 sitting/collected
trot strides alternating with 10 canter strides. Checkers loves to get fast and
heavy, so getting her back somewhat smoothly to a collected trot takes a lot of
planning!
Also nothing to do with this post. Pretty pic of Ginger, 2012. |
Take aways:
-Still with the heels DOWN. Instructor was laughing at me –
she’s like “every time you don’t like the distance you’re getting, you just
bury your hands in her neck and your heels creep up – try to sit back and do
something about it instead!”
-Checkers will look after me not matter what dumb decisions
I make.
-I love my new fellow riders – they’re great at encouraging
and cheering each other on.
-I don’t need to worry about Checkers’ jumping me out of the
tack any more – I feel way more secure these days on her giant self and sat
everything just fine when I remembered to wait and keep those pesky heels down.
-Checkers’ saddle – I love it! Its an old beat up Pessoa and
it’s like it was made for me. Too bad the ones I’ve tried previously don’t fit
Ginger, but something to keep in mind. I love my current saddle (Stubben), but
after riding in so many different ones over the last few months, I’m starting
to feel like it’s not as great a fit as it could be for me. I got it new on
super clearance, so financially it wouldn’t hurt to sell it on….but do I really
want to go back down the saddle fitting path when what I have is do-able?
Sounds like a fun return to lessoning, boo - boo and all. We have to make mistakes to learn from them and progress.
ReplyDeleteSaddle drama - but the good news is, all the different ones you've now tried out will deff help narrow down your search if you do decide to go down the stubben sales route ☺
I love to be challenged in lessons by my fellow riders. That's one of the reasons I like group lessons so much.
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