Horse & Hound

Masterclas­s

Swedish Olympic event rider Ludwig Svennerstå­l explains how shoulder-in on a circle encourages self-carriage

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Eventer Ludwig Svennersta­l on the benefits of practising shoulder-in on a circle

‘The aim is for the horse to be in self-carriage

and in front of the leg’

AIM

SHOULDER-IN on a circle is something I do every day, whether I’m warming up to jump or do dressage, as it shows me if the horse is on the aids and helps me ride from the inside leg to the outside rein.

The aim is for the horse to be in self-carriage and in front of the leg. If you discover that he is behind the leg and his head is behind the vertical, make sure that your contact is consistent and equal — check you are not using too much inside rein and make sure you use the inside leg to encourage the horse to think “up” and forward.

Transition­s are like changing gear on a car: if you go down a gear you don’t want to stop the horse in his tracks, but for him to gather himself and push forward into the new gear. Shoulder-in on a circle really helps with this.

When you go up a pace, make sure the horse goes into the new pace in a positive and active manner. Once he is forward then you can create collection by using your inside leg.

THE EXERCISE

1 Start on a 20-metre circle in walk and do a couple of steps of shoulder-in. Once that is establishe­d, proceed to trot and canter. Remember it is a simple exercise and you should ride from your inside leg to your outside rein. With new horses, I sometimes spend weeks on this first step to teach them to do it correctly.

2 Make small transition­s of tempo within the pace. Create more angle in the shoulder-in and keep your leg on to achieve a smaller trot — avoid the mistake of taking the leg off and using too much rein.

3 Make transition­s to different paces while doing the exercise. When going down a pace, use a bigger angle in the shoulder-in, keep your leg on, use your seat and “think” the transition to get the horse to change to the slower pace. Stay patient, as sometimes it takes 20 circles before the horse understand­s what you want him to do.

4 Go large around the arena, keeping the principles of the exercise in mind. If you have done the exercise correctly, the horse will be in self-carriage, on the aids and directed by a light touch of the outside rein.

 ??  ?? Ludwig Svennerstå­l en route to team silver at last year’s European Championsh­ips
Ludwig Svennerstå­l en route to team silver at last year’s European Championsh­ips

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