OTHER
ARTICLES BY CLEMENS DIERKS

Dressage coach, Clemens Dierks
continues his examination of the basics.
This month we look at the CANTER
Canter is one of those tricky paces, a little
bit like walk. The horse can easily block in the back
and get the pace tangled up, losing the sequence. Just
as some horses show a lateral walk, some go four beat
in the canter.
The four beat canter mostly comes about
from the horse not stepping through the rein and going
forward, the activity is inadequate in the hindquarters.
Some horses start to have a lateral canter. That again
is created through not going forward, and also blocking
in the back and lack of activity and collection in the
hindquarters. Even though this type of horse can produce
enough to make a flying change, as it is a lateral movement,
I am not impressed by it.

I think in canter you really must build
up the muscles over the back to make it possible for the
horse to stay round, to come up in the back, to arch the
back, to carry themselves. Once again, it is the same
recipe, you do this with transitions, activity within
the paces - but always keep the horse in front of you.
Some horses find an escape and suddenly canter very short
, and then you, the rider, are stuck, the horse is not
cantering out.
You must always have the horse in front
of the aids, moving away from the aids, never into or
against the aids. I see many horses, ridden by riders
who think their horse is collected, but what the horse
really does is to escape the collection by rolling themselves
up. This type of horse usually goes behind the vertical,
rolls up like a little round ball, and goes up and down.
The length of stride is reduced because the horse is not
in front of the rider's aids, and they are losing engagement
behind.
I see it many times in preparation for pirouettes
or within pirouettes. The hind legs don't separate any
more, they are stuck together, and the horse goes more
up and down rather than actually making a proper canter
stride which can be maintained. The rider finds it difficult
to come out of the pirouette when they have completed
the movement.
Canter is a difficult gait. Some horses
are naturally more talented for canter and in exercises
like flying changes, the quality of the flying change
depends on the quality of the canter; if you have a good
canter stride, you normally have a good flying change.
The flying change has to have the most expression of stride,
as it must go out in front and still be engaged behind.

The collected canter must have activity
and engagement. The clarity of the beat in canter is really
very important - three beat. The horse must accept taking
the weight more onto the hind leg, rather than trying
to escape it.
The canter must cover ground, the forward
movement and the horse's head must be steady. You see
many horses bob their neck up and down in canter, which
you don't see in trot.
The canter for the horse is a natural movement,
like walk, and you cannot restrict that movement or go
against it. It comes back to the basics again, going through,
allowing the half halt to flow through the body. Whatever
goes against your hand will never produce quality movement.
You see riders who try to ride pirouettes
pulling the horse in. I like to train them to collect
the horse properly before the pirouette, to prepare for
it and to be able to give within the pirouette to allow
it to happen. Not to hold and pull and make the reins
tighter.
I like to start the pirouette smaller and
then ride more forward within it. In collected canter
you are looking for more engagement, activity, with the
horse a bit shorter.
It is the same as when we discussed trot,
the horse must come up a little bit more in front, more
up and carry himself forward in the movement. But again,
some riders ride as if they permanently want to ride pirouette
canter.
In any pace, it doesn't matter what pace
it is, you have variations of collection. In trot, passage
is a collected trot in principle, in canter, there are
different variations for different exercises. For example:
flying changes are in a more forward collected canter,
a normal collected canter can still cover a lovely amount
of ground, a canter pirouette is a collected canter but
it's a totally different collection.
Each pace within itself has different variations
for different exercises. There's not just one collected
canter otherwise you would do everything the same, and
it cannot be done like that. In extended canter, you just
look for the most possible ground cover and length of
stride.
For a good extended canter, the horse does
a nice uphill canter on the bit, going with a lot of impulsion
forward. Going into, and out of, extended canter is not
hard, but many riders bring the horse back with the reins
instead of driving aids and seat. This problem occurs
mainly because the horse is not ready physically, and
is not properly trained for this transition, that is why
too much rein is required.
When the hand goes backwards, not forward,
the horse will immediately block the back. That's why
you see horses get disunited in the downward transition.
A balanced horse is a horse in self carriage, lightness,
which seeks the least possible support from the rider's
hands. It's really a two way transaction, one thing leads
to another.
A horse has a natural balance, which can
only be interfered with by a rider sitting on it. The
more skilled the rider is, the more the horse accepts
the rider, the more it can keep the balance. The main
task of the trainer is that of assessing the horse you
are training. The stronger the horse gets, the more easy
it becomes to keep the balance, the more you can start
to ask of it, and there is no pace where the strength
to create the correct balance is more crucial than the
canter. So there we are - the basics.
There are no magic tricks, just lots and
lots of transitions, lots of honest work to develop strength
and suppleness... and on those basics, the most beautiful
dressage can be performed.