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Learn to stand. 

Horse rider balance & independent seat

Balance of the horse rider is vital in all horse sports, and improving the rider's balance is not only essential for success it can also be a lot of fun

The fastest way to improve the horse's performance is to improve the rider's balance.  This leads to the ability for the rider to move any part of their body - with ease (the famous 'independent seat').

Any exercise, either on or off the horse that will improve the seat balance and posture of the horse rider is worth practicing.

Just think the surf board rider.  On Hawaii’s north shore those waves can get up to 75ft high.  The thought of dropping 75 FEET onto the reef below is enough to make ANYONE practice their balance skills!

You know we now have AMAZING sports coverage on television.  Just go and have a look for yourself, at sports like MOTOR CYCLE RACING.

No matter how many years I study the biomechanics of the athlete I will ALWAYS be astounded at the motor cycle rider.   Have a look for yourself…on the turns their inside knee is only inches from the ground as they ROAR around the track at HUNDREDS of kilometres an hour.   I don’t even want to THINK about what would happen if they made even the TINIEST mistake with their balance.

Just think about the balance of the Olympic diver standing up there on the platform ready to dive, or the gymnast on the balance beam…

In those sports Balance could be the difference between Olympic Gold and disaster.

What about the AMAZING story of Yurik Sarkisian.  22 years after he received his first medal for weightlifting, this amazing athlete, won all three competitions at the Commonwealth Games.   To win all three competitions, the snatch, the clean and jerk and the overall , he won the “grand slam”: at 41 years of age.  He is an amazing example of how good balance continues to keep the athlete winning, year after year.  Imagine the BALANCE you would need to lift seven bags of barley above your head!

It doesn’t matter what sport you think of balance is one of the key elements to success.  In dressage…one of the major things that the judge is looking for, especially at the higher levels, is the horse’s balance, and with jumping, we all know what it feels like to be out of balance.   To be “left behind”, or to be in front of the movement.

It doesn’t matter if you are a complete beginner, or an FEI professional, balance is something we have to work on and practice all the time.  If a horse rider has bad balance they’ll fall off.  But it’s not only the immediate threat like falling that we need to think about as coaches.

We also need to think about what’s going to happen in the LONG term.  You know the professional athlete spends MOST of their time working on their technique, their balance and their posture. 

If an athlete has GOOD balance, their career could continue for YEARS, injury-free. But say for example a runner leans on their right foot heavier than their left.  With years and years of pounding up the track, it doesn’t take a mechanical specialist to figure out which foot, or which knee or hip is going to give out first.  Any athlete’s career could easily be CUT SHORT because of poor balance.

And most riders have felt this for themselves at one time or another.  When riders tell me about ankle pain, 9 times out of 10 it is pain in only ONE ankle…just like the runner.

 The fastest exercise to improve your riding is to learn to stand up – FULLY (but that's just exercise No. 1...)

 With GOOD balance, and good mechanical use of our bodies, our careers should continue on track for YEARS.

The fastest way to improve your riding is to learn to stand.

There is absolutely no doubt in my mind about this. It has so many benefits, it is just incredible.

AND THE GOOD NEWS?  It doesn’t take long.  Seriously!  Most people, especially adults, find this an extremely difficult exercise in the beginning, often impossible.  However with only a few week’s practice, even injured or older more nervous riders find they really can learn how to do it.

When we talking about standing, it’s NOT “jumping position”, or 2 or 3 point position or “light seat”.  It is standing FULLY, just like you would if you were standing on the ground with no horse underneath you.

Obviously the initial benefit is a massive improvement in balance, but learning to stand also improves:

1.      The rider’s heels.  (If they are still up once the rider really has mastered this exercise, then the stirrups are probably too long)[1].

2.      Strength and co-ordination

3.      Ability to track the straightness of the rising (posting) phase of the rising trot[2].

4.      Ability to feel if one stirrup is carrying more weight than the other.[3]

5.      Improves the rising (posting) trot generally

Learning to stand up fully in the stirrups is JUST THE BEGINNING.

If you find it hard, start at halt, but as I said, this is JUST THE BEGINNING, and it is done in trot or canter, or even more difficult is downhill.  You can use it to encourage the “baby” shoulder in, in fact the entire dressage test, and jumping if you were game enough could theoretically be done standing.

The fastest way to improve your riding is to practice the standing, and advanced standing exercises.

Your balance has to be SUPERB for Olympic level competition, and this is only the first step to getting there.  If you think it is difficult, actually standing is only a basic exercise in a lot of major schools around the world, and NOTHING compared to what a vaulter needs to do!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

©  2007 Colleen Kelly Biomechanics.   www.colleenkelly.net   All articles & information on this website copyright (unless otherwise indicated) to Colleen Kelly, PO Box 1083, Bacchus Marsh, Vic. Australia.  
All rights reserved.    Last modified: 05/11/08.  Contact us for general information, or please report any specific website problems to webmaster@colleenkelly.net