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Trevor Woodward

Locality: Gooloogong

Phone: +61 429 638 511



Address: Kangarooby Rd 2805 Gooloogong, NSW, Australia

Website: http://www.cwsperformancehorses.com

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20.01.2022 World Cup Dressage Finals 2017 Isabel Werth (Ger) Wins Dressage World Cup Finals 2017 82.30% OMAHA, Nebraska, Mar. 30, 2017Isabell Werth and her Olympic team gold medal mount Weihegold OLD won the World Cup Grand Prix Thursday in the German rider’s quest for a third title. The pair scored 82.300 per cent. Boost post https://youtu.be/M90vAH5Vnyo... Top 3 Grand Prix de Dressage - FEI World Cup Dressage 2016/17 Final Carl Hester, Laura Graves and Isabell Werth make the top 3 of the Grand Prix de Dressage at the



12.01.2022 Just recently in a lesson I was giving we come across the perennial problem of teaching and up and coming talented rider how to lighten and shorten the frame without losing the horses rhythm. It is one of those problems riders on the way up face where they can plateau a little until they find the correct balance between seat legs and hands... To be a truly effective rider, your hands, seat and legs must be having a constant dialogue, and they must each make a proportioned con...tribution. You have to be able to speak to your horse through these contact points. This is when bravery becomes so important Any energy that you create from your horse’s hindquarters needs to be able to be half-halted by your seat, directed by your hand, from your leg, and so the cycle continues. If you haven’t got this cycle, then you can become complacent and end up settling into a gait that’s probably only going to earn you a score of 65% at best? Then it doesn’t matter how well you can do a shoulder-in or half-pass, or canter pirouette because if the basic gait is only worth 6.5 then the movements are only worth that much. This is where you decide to take the chance or not? Brave riding is rewarded with better marks. Talk soon... Trevor IbborsonTrevor Woodward See more

12.01.2022 COLLECTION --- The next level up for many is Collection to develop collection, work on transitions. As a rider, I dreamt of transitions forward and back, forward and back. Changes of tempo within a gait / pace must be ridden correctly from seat and leg to work like an accordion, compressing and extending the horse’s body to promote gymnastic ability and develop collection fully over time. The transformation in our horses was palpable, the difference in one month was outst...anding. . Cheers Trevor See more

04.01.2022 MAKE them WAIT Make them Wait is taken from an article re Passage and training manuals that are being written little by little, thanks, please read on... Whether you are at upper-level training or just starting, it is essential to teach your horse to wait for you to give the next aid or command as to what to do next. We must teach our horse to wait for you, if he/she is not waiting, you’ll never be able to go on to passage later and or transitions from passage to piaffe and p...assage to trot plus all of the lower level transitions. In dressage it is the top down model of training and part of the analysis of how you train is to understand the little nuance or pieces that make the jig saw of dressage. Make them wait in the transitions by asking for a few slower strides before going forward again. Mix the number of waiting strides up, so that they can never ever anticipate what comes next. This is rideability in the making. Remember it is always rideability first! Also, mix up the gaits as by way of medium to working and collected for example: 1. Be inventive and throw in a full halt in making them wait for a minimum of 3 seconds before moving off. 2. Always work them forward from behind, and work them back to you, and having them working over their backs. 4. Forward and back, forward and back, so then they can develop impulsion, collection, suspension, sensitivity to the aids, and then expression. If the horse is running all the time, they are on their front legs, unbalanced and will never make a nice collected trot. It’s the same in the canter, half halt back, half halt forward, from behind, get them to sit, play with them with flexion. The hindlegs need to be engaged and the front legs need to float more so. Hope this helps you keep the questions coming providing time is available I will help you as much as possible as a mentor. Best Regards Trevor FEI4U Dressage part of CWS Dressage Breeding & Training 61 +429 638 511 [email protected]



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