Martina Hannöver - The Walk is Not a Rest…
When we last visited the stables of
Jorn and Martina Hannöver-Sternberg, we were
lucky enough to witness the first steps along the
road to a competition career, of an exciting prospect,
Remember Me. Like so many of Tina’s horses,
the three year old Remember Me is by Rubinstein, the
stallion she took to Grand Prix fame, and he is out
of a mare by Inschallah, making Remember Me a full
brother to the handsome greys, Rescue Me (now in the
United States) and Reach Out (now in Holland).
Jorn had ridden the youngster for about a month, and
now his education was being progressed by one of Martina’s
team of five girls, an exceptionally sweet rider,
twenty year old Susie. Even Martina was impressed
with how the horse went for Susie, and decided it
was time for her to try him out for herself for the
first time. He looked lovely with Susie, fantastic
with Tina. The young Rubinsteins don’t usually
show much of a trot, but this one can stretch a bit
even at this stage, and for a baby, he has such lovely
natural balance.

Martina looked really happy as she came
into the walk from the trot, then suddenly felt something
she did not like and shot the horse forward again.
This happened about ten times until she was absolutely
sure that the horse was still forward in his transition
to walk.
"Even with a young just broken in horse it must
always go forward. Even in halt you must think to
have the horse in front of your leg. The horses have
to learn this, even from breaking in. We saw that
especially with Boyd (Martin, for Boyd’s story
of his time at Martina’s you’ll have to
wait ’til next month’s magazine) when
he was breaking in a few horses here, he wasn’t
interested in having the horse round at first, just
in front of the leg going forward. Later the horse
needs to go into the hand and then goes round and
down, without being afraid."

As Martina finished riding the young
horse, she gave it back to Susie, and as she lead
it away, gave it a little tap on the bottom with her
whip…
"When you lead in hand them they must be forward
too. In the material class you have to show them in
hand in trot, for the vet check also. Actually the
horses move on hand like they will with you on their
back. So if you walk along with the horse all strung
out with his neck up, he will be like that when you
ride him. Whatever you do with the horse you are always
training it, so you might as well train it to be right."
"This horse has been ridden for four weeks. At
first we lunge them, and lunge them really through
so we aim to build up their muscles, and learn that
the whip and the bit don’t hurt them. They learn
to be round without having a rider on, and we do this
for as long as they need."
It was interesting yesterday, when you were giving
Boyd a lesson on the young Argentinus gelding, you
were saying there was a point where you had to move
from just getting the horses to go forward, to getting
the horse to go forward into some contact?
"When the horses trust you, and
you can get on them without them getting tense, you
can walk them and trot them – then you should
start to keep them round. You cannot just push and
push with your leg to go forward, you must feel where
they arrive. What you push, the horse must arrive
in your hand, to make the horse round, and through
and listening to the half halt."
"To get the young horse to stretch, I put my
hands a little bit wider, I don’t really know
why I do that, probably it is from the lunging, they
are used to the reins a bit wider and they can balance
much easier. You can help them all the time, and they
learn to go straight and balanced, and after a little
while, you can put your hands more together."
"Especially with the young horses you can feel
more and more how they trust you. They are used to
the side reins when they are lunged, and if I put
both my hands on my legs, but I am still sitting with
both my seatbones into my hands, both hands even."
"When you are breaking in, some horses are afraid
and run away from the rider, and we just take our
time so they trust us, just get on, walk a few steps,
get off again if they are tense. It all depends on
the horse."
"At the moment because it is so cold, and the
outside arena is frozen, they work only inside, but
still we take them out for walks in hand, and when
the weather is better they will go on our little racetrack.
They trust us; they like to go outside with us. I
don’t ride the young ones so much. Like with
Remember Me I will ride him once every two weeks and
in between, the girls will ride him, just so he gets
used to the rider and gets conditioned. He’ll
have fun and still be relaxed. No-one is thinking,
he must be a Grand Prix horse in five years, it is
just playing around, but in our indoor, playing around
is still respect and work, and no rest in walk…"
