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Harry Boldt - A tribute: Part 2
The man who has coached more medal-winning Grand
Prix horses in the world than anyone else, Harry Boldt, talks
to ANN-MAREE LOUREY on one of his regular visits to Lochinvar
to train Heath and Rozzie Ryan as our series continues.
If you thought Harry Boldts business card
was unassuming, simply stating his name then its
no surprise to find the same theme in his book.
A simple cover which reads: The Dressage Horse. By Harry Boldt.
Youd have to be a privileged person to know it exists,
let alone find it in print, but what a magic book! It is merely
the English translation of Chapter III of his book Das Dressurpferd
sad that we cannot read the rest of it!
Imagine an overall training plan for each level, setting out
work levels for the year, breaking each session down, prioritising
each session. Oh, that it were so easy!

"There are many books on the market but they tell you
how the final result should be, how it should look, no one
tells you how to teach the horse a flying change or how to
work with the horse in piaffe and passage," says Harry.
"I went to the publisher to do this book in 1978
it should change now, I am not satisfied with it now, the
tests have changed, I would like to change it now and revise
it!"
In a survey by American magazine Dressage Today, Harry was
asked which was his favourite dressage book and his answer
was that of course it was his own! He recommended it for riders
from medium level to Grand Prix. The good news is that it
is in fact available from Dressage Extensions at www.dressage-ext.com.
You can buy the English version of Chapter III or you can
invest in the whole German edition for just under $US200.
Perhaps you could start a petition to get the whole thing
translated!
If you can get hold of a copy, you will find that Harry simplifies
dressage theories to the point where you shake your head and
wonder how it can possibly not work when you get back out
on the arena. He speaks of the "scales" of dressage
training, takt, losgelassenheit, anlehnung, schwung, geraderichten
and versammlung, and makes them household words.
You can read his opinions on draw reins, on cavaletti, on
work in hand, and nothing is clearer than his careful diagrams
that show every movement. Far from being technical, even my
nine-year-old can sink her teeth into it.
And despite the fact that Harry is no longer happy with the
book and would love to have another go at it, it is a hundred
pages that sets out in black and white (literally!) Harrys
system of training from medium to Grand Prix, using only the
systems and exercises and aids that have worked well for him
in the dressage arena.
"What I learnt from my father, what to do with young
horses, you do the same in this country," he explains.
"You have really good people here, Rozzie and Heath and
Mary (Hanna) and so many others - there are so many experienced
riders. What happens sometimes is that the not-so-experienced
riders work a little bit too fast with the horse - when he
is one or two or three years old he will do a flying change,
but we are only playing with him. He needs a little bit of
balance and to be not totalling running on the forehand, then,
why not a little bit with the flying change? If its
not through, it doesnt matter - change the hand, change
the canter. When you wait too long with this then the horse
is really confused later when you start suddenly touching
him with the whip. The young horse should be used to the whip.
"When he is totally on the forehand you need to bring
him up. When his back is not soft enough you need to keep
him round. When the back is hanging, and the horse is not
working with the back, the horse needs to reach down and be
soft. You can see the result. At the end bring him in balance
and you score a nine. You see if the horse can canter on the
spot, round and down, you go on and you try it again. That
is basic riding.
"When the horse is young you should be thinking that
you want that the horse is seeking your hands, that he is
not against, not behind, but seeking your hands, your reins.
All half-halts really are coming through the neck and back
and the hindlegs.
"Ride every new lesson with the half-halts on the short
side before the half-pass or a shoulder-in. Coming into the
corner, half-halt, flexion, then let the horse go. You need
rein aids in the shoulder-in the horse must be ready
for the shoulder-in. Coming around the corner to the long
side, the rein aids have more flexion. Before you start the
shoulder-in the horse must be really soft, so that it can
move left, right, and through the poll.
"One thing that helps me a lot is that I have ridden
in my life so many different horses and that is why when I
watch so many different dressage competitions in Europe I
see it then, what is happening. Its all in the FEI rules
- what the judges see, what is good and what is bad. I try
always like an FEI judge to see what the rider is doing -
is it successful? Are there any new ways? No, only there is
to find out what is best for that horse. I see so many horses
and now when I see a horse its already in my computer
and I think, I saw that once 15 years ago, I saw that, and
I know that is the way we can work with this horse and I say
to the rider we can try this and we can try that.
When you have ridden it all yourself as a successful competition
rider that helps a lot. You can never have this experience
without having ridden successful Grand Prix and without having
produced successful Grand Prix horses.
"When you want to be a really good strong Grand Prix
rider you should work every day with two to three horses to
have the fitness and I mean two to three horses with
sitting trot, really sitting. When you are riding a Grand
Prix test you must be really fit as a rider, you have to keep
together the horse from beginning to end. When, after completing
70% of the test, the horse is more and more on the forehand,
you have to have the strength to sit against him when he is
getting tired and weak.
"Anyone who has not two to three horses should go to
the gym and do a little bit of work there in the gym instead.
You must develop the back muscles so that you can have the
strength and can sit and keep the horse together with your
seat, do a little bit half-halts".
In The Dressage Horse, Harry agrees that while dressage riders
come in all shapes and sizes and can be just as effective
as each other, in his experience, those with a compact figure
are able to use their backs to greater advantage. Having said
that, some horses that he thought needed heavier riders responded
well to light females, leading him to recommend that every
rider finds a horse that suits him.
Harry is also very keen on interval training for dressage
training but dont be thinking of gallops and
walks with heaving sides and hills. Instead, Harry is referring
to creating an annual plan for the horse that allows some
"show-free" time to train the horse in movements
that he will need in his next competitive season. His book
tells us to plan out 12 months so that the horse has some
time in which he will not be worked to the limits of his training
every day, and some time where he will learn new movements
or work on his weaker points, and then build up to beginning
of the competition season.
"It is very important even in dressage horses to think
of interval training," he explains. "You cannot
keep the horse in top form all year, they must be up and down.
The best thing to do is that once a month you have a show,
a really top show (in Europe this is possible) and you build
up the horse.
"In the last two weeks before the show you work with
more intensive training, one day you do more trot work, the
next day piaffe/passage work, the next day canter work. The
second week, before the show, you start to ride the dressage
test. There is no need to do the extended trot and canter,
but you must make all of the corrections to the test, check
that the half pass is correct, that the halt is square and
that the horse is straight and on the bit in the halt. This
is the first impression on the judges and they can see then
if the horse is on the riders aids, they can see it.
"Build up the horse to the weekend of the show, start
in the last days before the show to ride the parts of the
test that could be a problem. Immediately the problem happens,
stop and do it again. The horses learn this, they learn that
they must do it and do it again. The older ones learn really
quickly if I do everything properly it is finished
for me for today. I like that kind of horse, they have
already learnt and are experienced!"
At the competitions, Harry points out that a good dressage
rider is one who can concentrate from beginning to end, who
can keep their horses the same through the test, who can maintain
self-control and develop an inner calm.
As for the judges, there is little point stressing over their
reaction to your test.
"Many judges with not so much experience, they only ever
watch, they learn from watching, that is not so good,"
he says. "It may be that it is developing here, though,
dressage riders more and more are judging, so have a little
patience and in a few years you will have more experienced
judges."
Harry should know about judges he has ridden so many
horses in so many tests! One of his favourite horses was Woyczek.
"I was lucky, a little bit lucky to get him," he
recalls. "Suddenly a sponsor came to me and said they
wanted a horse good enough for the Olympics. And suddenly
there was one, available because the owner had financial problems.
The horse was already once to Grand Prix, so you could see
he wasnt a bad horse, he could do piaffe, he was a nice
type. I got him at the end of 1975 and in 1976 we were at
the European Championships in Kiev in Russia. We were second
and the winner was very good. Granat was unbeatable at that
time with his piaffe/passage. He was getting all 9s and no
other horse could get that in the piaffe and passage. I was
always second to him, until 1979, I think then I was 3rd then
at Aarhus. Woyczek was a Hannoverian, a horse with a will
to work, I could work him at home without spurs or a whip.
He was easy, willing to work but sensitive. Sometimes I had
a problem to keep him on the bit in the double bridle because
he was so sensitive. The first two years you had to be very
careful with the curb rein a little too much and he
was immediately behind the vertical."

Harry must have been very careful Woyczek (pic below)
went on to win team gold and individual silver at the Montreal
Olympics in 1976. His European silver in Kiev was matched
in St Gallen in 1977 and he added the Aarhus bronze in 1979.
"God, I had so many beautiful horses!" Harry recalls.
"Golo he came to me for four weeks for a little
bit of riding to make him more rideable and he was with me
maybe from 1970 to 1974. The owners asked me for four weeks
work and after four weeks I told them it was a really good
horse and could I not keep it? In 1974 he competed as an individual
at the World Championships at Copenhagen. I was not with a
team but we were allowed two to three individual riders. There
were not enough riders then and it was a problem to get 20
to 25 riders for the Grand Prix. Golo was fourth in the Grand
Prix Special, two or three points behind the bronze medal
placing, and well above the competitive team member who was
in eighth place. Golo was a showjumper to 1m30 with his owner,
who was a young girl. Then she thought, lets try a little
bitpassage and he ended up German champion, won the dressage
derby after this he was sold. This is always the problem
when the horse is not your own.
"Then there was Sumatra he did everything. One
year he was in competition with Klimke and Mehmed. He was
later World Champion but this horse, there was a show in Germany
where the international judges had my horse win over Mehmed.
Then I rode in Munich Olympics in 1972 and in the closing
ceremony we had the top 12 dressage riders in a quadrille.
You see those old photos I am one of the last horses,
on the chestnut with a blaze. That horse was not good enough
for the team but was one of the 12 top horses doing very good
piaffe and passage. We travelled around Europe with that quadrille
everyone wanted to see it."
Harry, who now lives in Perth, was eventually awarded the
German Riders Gold Medal of Honour for his performances.
Next month: Harry talks about training the young horse
and creating an athlete.