
Story - Chris Hector Pics - Roz Neave
Theres magic in the air, magic that
makes an old man dance his way around the indoor, teaching young horses
an art as old as horsemanship. Herr Kukuk is 74 years young, for sixty
years he has worked with horses, 51 of them at the Westfalien State Stud,
and now at Ulrich Kasselmanns PSI dressage stables he combines his
years of experience with an enthusiasm that is as fresh as the new day.
Herr Kukuk is teaching the four-year-old horses short steps, the beginnings
of piaffe, in hand. His key words are patience and trust,
but in truth I feel it demonstrates that the most important task of the
trainer is to make the request reasonable and clear, and offer the horse
a comfort zone once it is doing what is asked. Step out of the comfort
zone and you might get a short sharp smack, move back in the zone and
the pressure is off. It is interesting that the horses that have worked
the most with Mr Kukuk are the calmest, they have been here before, they
know what is expected - but what they give is entirely unexpected. Herr
Kukuk gently strokes one of his whips over the rump of a four year old
Donnerhall/Rubinstein gelding and he starts the most brilliant piaffe...
This horse finds the work so effortless, look how easily he goes
into the hand, and how he is never afraid of the stick, it is just an
aid, never a punishment. This horse has the quality of elasticity, the
piaffe is so easy, so relaxed and so perfect in itself. It is so hard
with horses like this that have the willingness to come back and do the
piaffe on the spot, you must force yourself with a four year old to make
the piaffe go forward all the time, because one days work can ruin
it all, one day when you asked too much. It would be a sin to do something
wrong with a horse like this that is so willing and so perfect, if you
do anything wrong, if you over-do it, then that will remain with the horse
for life. He must be gently led on.
It is another of the paradoxes of Ulrich Kasselmann that he runs the most
slick up-to-date selling barn in the world, complete with CD ROMs of his
auction horses in motion, yet turns to genuine old masters for his trainers.
Herr Kukuks predecessor was General Stenken, who retired in his
mid-eighties, but who even now carefully quizzes his young successor about
the progress of the horses. I like older trainers, says Mr
Kasselmann, they have patience and time, the younger trainers are
sometimes too much in a hurry to get there.
Our helper during the working session with Mr Kukuk, was Steffi Rexrodt,
a charming South African event rider who discovered a love for dressage
at the Kasselmann stables six years ago, and has been there ever since.
Thanks to her translation, and commentary, Mr Kukuks techniques
and philosophy are so much easier to understand.
Steffi: With this horse with a lot of blood, the important thing
is to get his trust so that he doesnt over-react, so he learns to
wait to do his work, and doesnt drag his leader around. That is
the most important thing when you start with a four year old, to teach
them to stay with the leader, the person who has the rein in their hand.
The horse must go into the hand, but never go past the person who is leading
them. They learn not to run into the hand and hurt themselves, run backwards,
or sideways, just concentrate on the leader. It is like a rhythm stick
in front of them, and the horse says, okay, I can balance on him
by just visual contact. Once they get that, you can see the horse
concentrating on their leader and going into the hand with trust.
They start by going in a circle, as if you are lunging. On the circle,
take the whip - which unfortunately the horses see as a punishment, no
horse likes the look of the whip - and just touch the quarters, or touch
the hind leg, so they learn to pick up their leg at the touch. If the
horse charges through the handler, they stop, they pat him, until he is
fine. You would be amazed how quickly the horses calm down. They over-react
all the time at the beginning, and you just have to hold them, they are
like little whippets, running all over the place. Some of the horses are
bloody strong and overwilling, so well use a different bit, a little
sharper so the horse has respect.
Sometimes we will work with older horses to get them back again.
This horse is a ten year old Rubinstein gelding. He started off with Mr
Kukuk but he was sold and has been away for many years and he has just
come back - and Mr Kukuk is starting to get the refinement back in again.
Herr Kukuk: These steps are very good because the horse has begun
to wait. The most important thing is trust to the leader so he goes into
the hand without being scared. With a new horse, you always have to feel
- like a raw egg - how far you can push.
Steffi: Its incredible, Mr Kukuk never gives up. You think
with some of the young ones this will never work, and he goes on and on
until he gets some steps. Good boy. Pat. And when they led
them out, they are not crazy or frightened, they are happy and relaxed,
they have worked.
He never punishes them, he just keeps going until they are ready
to wait, and be worked. The horses enjoy coming down here.
Once they calm down, and relax, then the work is just brilliant.
The horses should always leave the work with Mr Kukuk being totally
calm. They should never walk out of here frightened, because obviously
the next time they come down here, they will be frightened again, then
it will be harder to work with them. Once they lose their confidence and
trust, then you cant get good work from the horses. On the other
hand, if the horse is not working, then he might get a whack, but they
dont get a fright. Some might kick out, then they get another whack,
then they are calm and they really listen.
Mr Kukuk: Before we work each horse, take a break long enough to
make sure everything is right. The side rein should be as long as possible,
so that when I ask them to step forward, the contact doesnt hit
the side-rein, that you really have the horses mouth on your hand.
Then I go onto a circle and try to find the horses own rhythm and
take hold of that, and see if they will react to the touch of the whip
on the inside hind leg - they must be prepared to bring it up when I touch
them, but keeping the rhythm. The eye of the holder is most important,
you must watch the horses rhythm. The handler must really know the
sequence of the horses steps, must see that the whole of the horse
is in its own flow, and you are not interrupting that - and out of that
flow, maybe get three steps. The sequence of the steps is diagonal and
if you use the stick in the right sequence, you already have a tiny way
forward to the piaffe. When they are first starting then we only do two
rounds of the circle, with just one handler, and then they are finished,
they can go home. They dont go straight onto the wall. This horse
has only been here two times.
If
the horse starts to run away, pat it and take it on a small circle until
it relaxes.
Steffi explains that the horses do not come into the in hand session cold.
We always work the horses before they come down here. On Monday
mornings, because they are coming to do the in hand work, so you give
them a nice long warmup so the horse is really flexible, twenty to thirty
minutes, then bring them here. After they work here, then they rest. It
would be too hard on the four-year-olds to work them after this. They
get worked like this every Monday, then on Thursdays, Mr Kukuk comes and
teaches us, just riding on the horses normally. Then with some of the
five year olds, or the very talented four year olds, he helps by schooling
you on the horse.
Mr Kukuk: It is very important to teach the horse this when he is
young, to let him find his rhythm, otherwise hell have little mistakes
that get worse and worse when he gets older so that by the time he gets
to Grand Prix, you can never rectify the mistakes. The horse must close
and bend, with his hocks getting really low, and he must learn to use
his legs in diagonal pairs. Every horse is an individual, if you overwork
a horse, then he will never trust you. Even with the older horses, it
is more comfortable for them to learn like this, without a rider.
You can see how the horses that have been worked like this a couple
of times, they are willing to work, they dont have to be pushed
into it. They want to do it.
See when I get perfect steps, everything is there: rhythm, diagonality,
the hocks are down. That is perfect.
Steffi: Some
horses try too hard. They know what they have to do, but they get over-anxious,
I can do it, I can do it, and then they lose their diagonality
and rhythm, when you get it right, then stop.
And stop they do, absolutely dead square every time. How does he do that?
Steffi: Its not so much a training thing, it is when he halts
them to make them stand and pat them, they always have to stand square,
he always corrects them if they are resting a leg or something. He corrects
them with the whip. It is such a help when you are riding the young horses,
when you go to ride trot/halt, they know what it is all about.
With the rider on the horse, Mr Kukuk would get the piaffe steps and then
ask the rider to let the horse out into an extended trot.
Steffi: We dont just do this very collected work and then
come to a total halt. Get one more extended trot out of the horse, and
then let them stretch and relax. It involves a lot of hyper muscle concentration.
With
a young horse, to teach a good passage, you need a good rider on top,
who knows when the horse is in front of him or her, you cant do
everything from the ground. To help with the front end action, you must
have the horse so trusting that you can run up to them, and touch the
front legs with the whip, without the horse being scared. They have to
trust you to do this kind of work. You can see when Mr Kukuk uses the
stick on the forearms, how much more expressive the work becomes.
Mr Kukuks enthusiasm never waned, each new horse presented a new
challenge, and when he got the result, his joy was obvious: See
this horse, it is like a gazelle. Its like dancing with a woman,
it is so much easier when you have a lady who is not even touching the
floor, thats how it should be. This horse is a good dancer.
It is very important to always take this whole rhythm in the forward
movement - not blocking them, keep them moving forward, never backwards.
I guarantee that in four or five times, with the rider sitting on the
horse, which makes it easier because the rider can concentrate on keeping
the horse straight, and I can concentrate on the legs, I will get at least
five or six brilliant steps.
Steffi: Here with a five year old horse that has had more work with
Mr Kukuk you see the horse settle down, and get into the work much quicker.
You notice the springiness of the hocks.
Mr Kukuk
always says that the most important thing you have to watch when a horse
is doing in hand work, is what he calls the trousers, it is
that little diamond shaped muscle above the hock, if you see that relaxing
and playing, then you know that the movement is coming forward. That is
the most important area to watch.
And what was it like to ride a horse after it had a little tune with Mr
Kukuk? According to Steffi, Its good, when you come with your
leg there is more response, they dont run off or anything, they
just go ok I know what you mean. The nice thing about doing
this work on a Monday is that the horses stay finely tuned for the week.
Its not as if come Friday you are desperately waiting for Monday
to come again... wheres Mr Kukuk when you need him. But you do feel
the difference and the horses that have been worked quite a lot, you feel
how much easier it is to work with them. If you want them to halt electric,
and really stand square, you notice that they know what they are doing.
The last words belong to Mr Kukuk:
I have been working with horses for sixty years, and the older I
get, and the more I learn, the more I realise the most important word
is patience.
Photos of horses as they appear in the
story -
Livello - 5 years old, ( Lancer II / Don Giovanni xx)
Weltclassiker, 4 years (Welt Hit II / Classiker) sold PSI 2000 auction
for DM1,300.000
Johannes works Romanzzino, a 4 year old (Rohdiamant / Corlando
River Dance, 6 years (Remondo / Welt As) sold PSI auction for DM600, 000
Resident rider, Insa Hansen and River Kwai, a ten year old (Rubinstein
/ Wendekreis)
Der Rubin - a 4 year old by Donnerhall out of a Rubinstein mare.
Sold for DM600,000 at the PSI auction

Herr Kukuk, a life with horses...
When I came to Warendorf, luckily I was talented, and I had a
very good trainer, and he made sure that I was allowed to go to the
Spanish Riding School in Vienna. In Vienna they were very surprised,
when they asked me what I would like to learn there, and I said, everything.
The apprentices who come to Vienna, have two hours, one hour being on
the lunge, and the second one with the trainer on the floor. But I wanted
more, so I went to Colonel Podhajsky, and he gave me a five-year-old
Lipizzaner stallion, which I was allowed to work, and also to ride in
the public performances. Through that I came to the in hand work. I
was lucky enough to have the full support of the head trainer, and I
was able to ride everything, levades, all the movements. Sometimes you
sit back and ask yourself, what is the most beautiful to ride,
is it the piaffe, is it the levade, is it the capriole? I dont
know, I was just lucky to be able to ride all those movements, and they
were very nice, they said I didnt have to pay the pupils
fees.
I took all that experience back to Warendorf, and straight away
started with the work in hand, and people heard and came to watch and
saw that it was a very successful way to teach the horse. I also learned
to work with the two long reins, and have demonstrated that technique
many times. There is only one big difference between here and Vienna
- they do the work with the Lipizzaners, we work with our big Warmbloods.
I was very proud, they asked me back to Vienna to accept a Masters
Degree.
I asked Mr Kukuk if work in hand was a dying art?
Definitely not, thanks to the Kasselmann yard, this art keeps
going because all these young and beautiful horses get trained in this
way, and this is seen not only by the riders here, but also by trainers
from all over the world who come here to buy horses. It is so important
that we still have this art.
When teaching the work in hand, people are individuals like horses,
it is very hard for some people to stay relaxed, and upright, and supple
when they go backwards. I have taught Johannes, the young man who works
here, everything, and he can do it to perfection, and now I am training
another young man. It doesnt have to be a man, females can do
it as well.