Tips For A Successful Show Season

Unless you’ve done the winter circuits in Florida or California, you’re probably thinking about your first show of the season. And for many of you amateur riders, this might be your first show season ever. As I watch my own students make their plans for the year, I wanted to share some musings on showing from the trainer’s perspective—mistakes I see riders make, both in and out of the ring, that make their lives so much harder and shows so much less fun.

1. Remember this is supposed to be a pleasurable experience. Amateur or professional, this is supposed to be fun. No one gets into horse training for the money; we do it for fun. And I’ve never met an amateur who feels obligated to ride; they choose to do it, again, because it’s fun. So lighten up. Take a breath. Enjoy the journey.

When it all goes to hell in a handcart (which it definitely will, at some point), you’re allowed between 10 minutes and 12 hours of pouting, doled out on a sliding scale of the severity of the disaster. (One bad ride at local show on green or new-to-you horse: 10 minutes. Calamitous performance at the National Championships: 12 hours. Fill in the middle as you see fit.) Pouting shall, under no circumstances, involve crying in public, shouting at anyone, taking any of your feelings out on your horse, or generally making a scene. I recommend, once you’ve gotten your horse and your equipment put safely away, getting in the car and driving to Dairy Queen. Just as a trailer ride to the vet cures many colics, the car trip to Dairy Queen bolsters the spirits of most failed competitive endeavors.

Read the rest at The Chronicle of the Horse!

By |2018-04-09T15:26:40-04:00April 9th, 2018|COTH Posts|1 Comment

Where In The World Is Lauren? Spring & Summer 2018 Edition

Where is Lauren Sprieser off to? All over! Here’s the list of clinics Lauren will be teaching in Spring & Summer of 2018.

April 21-22 – Huntleigh Equestrian Center, Ottawa CAN
May 12-13 – Maven Sport Horses, Powder Springs GA
June 2-3 – Kaleidoscope Farm, Springfield VT
June 30-July 1 – Carbery Fields Farm, Lebanon CT

Lauren has weekends available in July and August, as well as in October, November and December. Email her to learn more.

By |2018-04-06T17:09:45-04:00April 6th, 2018|News & Events|0 Comments

Spring & Summer Clinic Dates with US Olympian Michael Barisone

US Olympian and trainer of Olympians Michael Barisone will be joining us monthly for a weekday clinic. Ride spots are available only to current students, but auditing is $35/day if pre-registered on EventClinics.com, or $40/day at the door, and lunch is included. An RSVP is appreciated either way so we know how much food to make!

Michael will be joining us April 25-26, May 23-24, June 20-21 and July 18-19.

By |2018-04-06T17:04:38-04:00April 2nd, 2018|News & Events|0 Comments

Down To The Wire Of Florida 2018

We’re down to the last few weeks in Florida, and my horses are humming along. The best thing is that nothing interesting is happening with any of them, and that’s more than could be said for really the last 10 months! It’s business as usual, and I love it.

For Puck, “usual” means that he finally decided I was in charge about six weeks ago, and he’s been an absolute joy to ride. There’s no amazing capital-D Dressage going on, but the fact that I can just get on and close my leg and my hand and get to work is a huge, huge deal.

In the last two weeks or so, he’s let me open up another gear in the trot. I don’t get it consistently, but it’s accessible now, whereas in August he’d lock into this big floaty trot with tension in his back and use it as a means of resistance. The trot he offers me now has some expression, which is neat, but more importantly has tremendous swing. It’s pretty fun, and I can imagine what a blast it’ll be two years from now when there is strength and capacity behind it.

Read the rest at The Chronicle of the Horse!

By |2018-03-25T05:59:40-04:00March 16th, 2018|COTH Posts|0 Comments

Nuance

I was a working student for Carol Lavell when I graduated from college. For those who don’t know Carol, not only is she a member of that very elite club of American riders who’ve placed fourth individually at the Olympic Games, but she also studied chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. To say that Carol is brilliant would be a colossal understatement.

That brilliance carries over into her teaching and in the way she thinks about riding. I remember feeling so overwhelmed in my lessons with her back then—she sees everything and asks for a reason behind every aid I apply. Why did I take back on the left rein just there? What effect should it have had? Did it have that effect? Now what are you going to do about it? She operates at an incredible level.

At the time that level of instruction was wasted on me. I couldn’t appreciate that level of precision, didn’t yet realize the level of finesse required to ride at the international Grand Prix level. I’ve trained and shown several horses up the levels since, and each one has made me more subtle, more sophisticated in my approach.

Read the rest at The Chronicle of the Horse!

By |2018-03-25T06:01:25-04:00February 27th, 2018|COTH Posts|3 Comments

My Equine Illness & Injury Survival Kit

After nine months of rest, rehab, surgery and lots of anxiety, Danny took a big step forward in his return to work—he was cleared to go back under saddle! He’ll walk for four weeks, to build up the topline muscle that disappeared post-colic surgery, before we begin trotting and cantering as rehab from the leg injury he sustained last spring.

Along this long road, I’ve gotten to play with some great rehab techniques, both old and new, to get Danny to where we are today: happy, healthy, and rebuilding.

Read the rest at The Chronicle of the Horse!

By |2018-02-24T05:37:45-05:00February 24th, 2018|COTH Posts|1 Comment

The Sights, And Snacks, Of Wellington

The horses have settled into Florida, and we’re up and running. I have four amateur clients with me, with competition ambitions from training level to Grand Prix. Puck is working beautifully, day by day wrapping his head around the fact that my leg ain’t goin’ nowhere and accepting this as his lot in life. Danny is back under saddle, spending a month walking to rebuild muscle, as well as walking 30 minutes, four days a week on the super-cool water treadmill. Life is getting back to normal.

But Wellington is anything but normal. Thousands of horses come to this little town every year. There are a dozen tack shops, half a dozen feed stores. The art everywhere—on the sidewalks, on the walls of the coffee shops and restaurants, even at the gym—is horses. This is the holy land.

And this has also been my winter home for eight of the last 11 years, so I know my way around a bit. Should you find yourself down Wellington way, here’s a few places to make sure you visit.

Read the rest at The Chronicle of the Horse!

By |2018-02-24T05:34:55-05:00February 15th, 2018|COTH Posts|0 Comments

Learning The Language Of Dressage: On The Bit

There’s a lexicon to dressage. Connection, suspension, swing: These are words that have a very specific horsey, and dressage-y, context that we dressage trainers throw around and make it sound like we’re speaking Swahili, such that a layman might not grasp our meaning.

And coming to an understanding of those terms, from the beginning of one’s riding career to the point of mastery, takes a long time, a lot of feel and even a constant evolution.

One of my students just yesterday said to me, basically, “Oh my gosh, I thought I understood what you meant by sit down and put your leg on, but it’s so much more than I’d thought!” She’s a lifelong rider, now right on the brink of Grand Prix. We never finish learning Swahili.

But one of the biggest and most important concepts to grasp is that of being “on the bit.” Doesn’t that just mean pulling my horse’s head down? Funnily enough, it’s a little more complicated than that. I don’t think I can nail it, perfectly and succinctly, in one blog. But if you all will allow, let me wax philosophical (because it’s what dressage trainers do) about this oft-used but ill-understood basic tenant of the dressage horse.

Read the rest at The Chronicle of the Horse!

By |2018-02-24T05:32:18-05:00February 1st, 2018|COTH Posts|0 Comments
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