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But the answer to your problem is almost certainly simpler than you think – and simpler than the experts might be telling you. Chances are you don’t need fancy equipment or expensive osteopathic or veterinary care. Chances are that you and your horse are out of alignment which affects the fit of your saddle! ART quickly and easily helps you to find out what’s creating those maddeningly frustrating problems. Joni Bentley has a growing reputation for transforming horses with poor movement into naturally good movers using ART. Joni is unique in having triple expertise in horse soundness, rider soundness, and saddle soundness (how well your saddle fits you and your horse). Many common behavioural, physical, or saddle-fit issues are simply the result of an ergonomic misalignment between horse, saddle, and rider. Some of the most common signs include:
An increasing number of veterinarians and equine physiotherapists, chiropractors, and osteopaths are becoming aware of how often they get called in to identify and treat damage that is related, directly or indirectly, to saddle fitting and riding style. The common approach – rigorous schooling and fancy gadgets – creates ongoing, sometimes crippling discomfort for both horse and rider. ART brings the pleasure of true athleticism, engagement, and partnership to rider and horse
ART™ stands for Alignment riding therapy. “It’s a ‘rear view’ that almost no one ever sees,” she explains. “Traditionally, teachers or trainers stand in the centre of the ring. I get behind the horse and rider, so I immediately see what’s happening.” ART begins with the simple fact that horses and people – like everything living – are naturally crooked to some degree. No matter how highly they have been trained in the saddle , their natural crookedness (right or left handedness) pulls them out of shape as they go about their everyday life. If the rider is not schooled regularly three or four times a week their riding position suffers. When a rider understands the ways in which she and her horse are crooked, she can easily straighten herself and her horse with simple body movements. These body movements school the rider’s body and the horse’s body – and thus the horse’s movement – at the same time. With ART, the rider quickly sees why her horse struggles on one rein, one canter lead, or suffers bridle lameness. With a well-balanced body and a properly-fitted saddle, the horse becomes calm, safer, and far more enjoyable to ride. With ART, you can...
What can do for you? Point #1: The horse Just as humans are left- or right-handed, horses are either left-hind drivers (left hind leg is strongest) or right-hind drivers (right hind is dominant). Frosty is a left-hind driver. Watch how the tapes on the back of horse, rider, and saddle reveal his alignment problems.
This sideways movement is typical in horses with a dominant hind leg. Instead of forwards, the dominant hind pushes sideways. Although the thrust is stronger, the stride is actually shorter, leaving the rider’s seat unsupported on that side. This crookedness results in lack of impulsion, crab walking, and R.S.I. (repetitive strain injury) of the sacroiliac joints, hocks, and stifles.
Groovy is a right-hind driver. She jumps to the left side of the fence because her right hind crosses sideways to the left. This leaves her rider Louise unsupported and hanging off to the right. Point #2: The saddle
For this horse, the bruising and atrophy is so bad that the saddle is now sitting painfully close to the bone, leaving the vertebrae vulnerable. Is it any wonder that horses become grumpy and resist being saddled? Point #3: The rider
It will come as no surprise that your horse’s
left- or right-hind dominance has a direct effect on your ability to sit
straight in the saddle.
Due to the affects of left hind-dominance the muscles under the right scapular have altered pushing the saddle up and back on the right. This twists the saddle and forces it to wedges up against the vertebrae on the left side of the wither which is often a hot spot for lumps to appear. Without support on the right, the saddle – and therefore the rider – drops down and back on the right. The rider unconsciously tries to re-balance herself by leaning to the left, collapsing her left hip, twisting and collapsing through the waist. Her pelvis tips down to the right, and she holds her right shoulder and seat bone back. This shifts her left hip and thigh upwards, pulling her left knee and heel up and forwards. She tenses her left shoulder and puts extra pressure on her right stirrup. And you thought it was all your fault you couldn’t sit straight! ART schools the rider into straightness away from the horse. With the physical understanding of what “straight” feels like in her body, the rider then learns to counteract her horse’s crookedness. After completing an ART workshop, Louise went home to put her learning into practice. You can see the improvement! Her back is relaxed and her shoulders are aligned over her hips. The horse's quarters are straight. Her stirrups are level, whereas before the right one was lower. And all the tapes line up! Here’s what she has to say about learning the ART
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