
Kyra Kyrklund is widely acknowledged as one of the world's great masters
of the highly collected movements - piaffe and canter pirouette in particular,
it was fascinating then, to see her starting to develop the collected
movements, with Mary Hanna's Rituel.
"Before asking for collection, you must teach short steps. Teach
with the hand and whip, no leg, and shorten the steps until there is
nearly no trot at all."
"As dressage riders we should all become better at mathematics!"
And Kyra shows why. She rides between two markers and counts the strides.
In this case, 13 steps. Then she rides the same distance in short steps
counting as she goes - and it comes up 19 steps. Now, she puts the leg
on, and rides it in nine long steps.
"Play with the rhythm, play with the number of steps per minute.
It's the same with the outline, I can put him down as much as I want
to, and bring him up as much as I want to. I can ride him fast, and
I can ride him slow."
Once again, Kyra returned to the elusive concept of 'in front of the
leg'.
"Many riders try to get a horse in front of the leg by chasing
him, and they will never get there that way. It is best to experience
the feeing of in front of the leg with an old school master. You can
learn more from a good horse than the best teacher in the world."
For the walk to canter transition lesson, Kyra returned to the leg yield,
and this time really bending the horse around her inside leg. "When
I don't need to push with the inside leg in the leg yield, then I can
do the canter transition. Leg yield to canter is a good way to get the
horse listening to you. Ask him gently, and if he doesn't listen try
a little kick, and next time, ask gently again."
Once again, Kyra has a new twist on an old 'truth'.
"You hear very often you have to get strong with your back to use
your leg. I think you have to be strong with your tummy to use leg,
rather than strong in the back. You have to be able to use your muscles
without getting tense. You have to be able to feel what is happening
under you. Good riders don't push down into the saddle, they balance
themselves on their seat bones, and point with the seat bone rather
than pushing with the seat bone."
Kyra is an old hand at the lecture demo - and she knew what the Equitana
crowd has come to see...
"What you want to see are tricks, tricks, tricks not boring basics.
The basics is the work I enjoy. This is how you get scores of 70% in
dressage tests - the only way to earn more points is through the quality
of your work; that means - proper straightness, proper collection, proper
relaxation. You must analyse what is happening with your horse. Is he
floppy or is he relaxed? Is he forward or is he tense?"
"It can become puzzling. Your trainer says ride the horse slower,
slower, and eventually you ride it too slow. Then you go to another
trainer, and they say, go faster, fast, fast, fast - and it works for
a while, then you end up going too fast. Most trainers are heading in
the same direction, there are no 'golden keys'. You just keep trying
until you find the way. The more keys you have, the more alternatives
to get through to the horse. Horses in principle want to be nice - they
don't stand in the box thinking 'how can I annoy the rider'. The trouble
is that we tend to memorise the awful times and not that great feeling
when we won. Think about it, was a quarter of that circle really good,
or was three quarters of the circle really bad? Think about the good
feeling, remember it, and then you can make it work for you."
It was time for a change of horse, and the newcomer was Emma Youngman's
shiny black, and glorious, Swedish stallion, Rasputin. Once again, Kyra
starts with the STOP GO routine, stressing that while it is hard to
tell if your half halt goes through, it is easy to see if he has stopped
or not.
"Half halt is like the rubbish bin of riding - you put all the
difficult things in there, and call it half halt. The half halt is not
something you learn, it comes from being able to control the frame of
the horse."
Control the frame - and control the leg: "Use your whip like a
longer hand, to connect the horse. Make him move more behind, make him
bend correctly - the more correctly he bends, then the more he develops
the ability to collect. The more collection develops, the more the horse
has to bring his legs under him."
And why do we ask the horse to do two track work? To get his legs under
him, and to get him listening to the aids.
"To move on two tracks, the horse has to be listening to the rider's
leg, and I teach that with leg yielding. Some riders think that it is
best to rush to half pass, I don't believe that, half pass comes from
listening to the aids. In all lateral work, you have to be careful that
the horse moves in the same rhythm and in the same way."
"Shoulder in is fantastic if you really push the shoulders in -
not just the quarters out - and soften on the inside rein. Start by
riding an eight metre circle, and see if you can keep the track of the
hind leg on the track of the outside leg. If you have established connection
on the outside rein, then you can ride shoulder in. Remember that leg
yielding is only a loosening exercise, while shoulder in is a collecting
exercise."
"When we talk about two track work, there is always a big discussion
- should we do it on three tracks or four tracks? Three tracks is correct,
but if you do the shoulder in only on three tracks, then only one judge
out of five, sees it, so you do a bit more! The main thing is not three
or four tracks, but if I want to do three tracks or four tracks, I can
do it."
"To start the shoulder in, ride a little circle, then hold the
bend and come out in shoulder in. It's the same for travers, ride a
little circle then hold the line again, and push the horse out in travers.
Travers and half pass are exactly the same movement, half pass is just
travers on the diagonal. As you come across on the diagonal, the ears
have to be the same height, the forehead has to be pointing in the direction
we are going. It is the inside leg that pushes the horse forward, and
we sit with our weight in the direction of the movement. The inside
rein indicates the direction and the outside rein indicates the length
of the horse."
"You have to feel with your bum what is happening behind you. You
don't have a rear vision mirror, and you can't go looking behind you."
And of course, with any exercise, there comes a point where the horse
finds it difficult - and according to Kyra, this should be another learning
experience for both horse and rider.
"When you hit the point when the horse finds it difficult, then
many riders try to get it over quickly, they try to do the half pass
with more bend, and quicker - that's not the best thing to do. Cut the
exercise up into pieces, first learn to do it slowly in small steps
then try it bigger and faster."

Out of her lateral work, Kyra starts to introduce the flying change:
"Do a few steps of travers on a straight line, then straighten
for the flying change. However I suggest that if you haven't taught
flying change before, send the horse to a professional for a few weeks.
You should give the aid for the flying change when the inside front
leg is on the ground. Your inside leg should be light and floppy with
the outside leg keeping the horse cantering forward. Ask for the change
with the inside leg and the inside rein, and you can release the old
outside rein."
One of the things that made Kyra's clinic so interesting were the quality
of the horse's she worked with, and her work with Limbo, the horse she
trained to FEI - and competed with at Aachen in the Prix St Georges,
before selling him to Mary Hanna - was just mind boggling, especially
her work on canter pirouettes.
"If you start the canter pirouettes before you have the degree
of collection you need, then the horse will become afraid of the pirouette."
Sounds fairly straightforward doesn't it? That is until you discover
what Kyra considers enough collection!
"You should start your pirouette very very collected like piaffe,
almost cantering on the spot but keeping the same rhythm."
And off they went, the horse getting slower, more like a giant preying
mantis with every stride. Walk - give the rein, canter, slow, slow,
stop, canter, canter, stop, canter, canter...
"I want him to stretch down with his neck. If the neck is too short,
he can't come up with his hindleg, he can't bring his tummy up to go
with his back."
"If the horse starts to get on two tracks, go to the wall and do
it in counter canter, then you don't have to worry about two tracks.
You have to sit and make the horse do the work, you can't get forward
in the saddle to try and make him canter, sit back. It is such a fine
balance, it is the same as a jumping horse, when you get to the fence
you have to release when you see the last stride - think into canter,
into canter, into canter. You don't have a moment of suspension in the
pirouette - if you take a photo of the first step of pirouette, it's
the same as a step of piaffe, you can't tell the difference if it is
a good pirouette. That's why the rhythm in pirouette is a different
rhythm than the rhythm of canter - for a long time the judges wouldn't
accept that, but they do now. I only do pirouettes when I feel everything
is correct and the horse can do the movement easily. If they do something
wrong, then they get worried."
With the more experienced Limbo, Kyra was able to get fancier with the
changes.
"Because my first horse had problems with changes, I never do a
flying change without counting myself in. One - Two - Change. One -
Move - Change, that gives you threes. Get the rhythm and apply the aid
at the right moment. For two times changes, it is - move - change -
move - change. You don't have to do much with your hands."
And she proves it by tossing off a series of changes, one handed.
"With the one times changes if you give the aid and wait, you get
twos instead of ones. You have to be sure of your horse. It's like walking
up stairs, you can't think about it."
On to the 'BIG ISSUE': "Piaffe and passage. It's natural. If the
horse has been standing in the stable, put him in the paddock and his
tail goes up, and passage. We want to keep that energy without getting
the horse nervous. We have to be able to shorten and lengthen the step,
without getting stuck in our hand, without riding backwards."
"If he is pulling in passage, then I don't ask more. I just stay
in the same steps until he stops pulling on my hand. I will ask for
less passage, shorter steps, until he is doing it, then I can ask for
more again."
"Some horses have more ability for collection than others. Some
horses are built with their hocks out behind them, and they find it
very difficult to come under for piaffe and passage. Horses that stand
with their legs under themselves, may not be so good for extended trot
but they will be easier in piaffe and passage. Horses with the biggest
trot are not necessarily the best dressage horses. We call it an 'expensive'
trot because that is what you pay for, but the horses with those trots
are not necessarily the best horses for Grand Prix."
"I had a wonderful Prix St Georges horse but if I tried to make
him do Grand Prix, I would only break him by trying to force him to
do something he couldn't do. I decided I'd rather have a sound Prix
St Georges horse than a crazy Grand Prix horse. Some horses are not
destined for piaffe. Some horses you can see it when they are three
or four, will do piaffe easily."
"For passage, start with very short steps, don't use your leg,
let your leg go completely floppy. Keep him straight, so we get three
bad, bad, bad, steps, then five good ones - it's those five good ones
that I go for again. It's a bit like making tea, you have to get to
boiling point without making him tense. When I have passage that I don't
have to work for every step, then it is time to go to piaffe."
"Boil the kettle again, getting his hind leg under his body, still
loose in my hand, I sit with a relaxed leg so he will listen, it is
more like kicking with the lower leg than squeezing."
And once again, to prove her point, Kyra rides the movement one handed.
"You have to be able to ride every movement in one hand... then
I will see you at the Sydney Olympics."
We hope we see you there too Kyra, and we hope that you will once again
visit Australia, and teach, before too long.