Success through Cavaletti Training DVD
$49.95
Success through Cavaletti Training DVD by Ingrid Klimke
Complicated? Boring? Quite the opposite! Cavaletti work is a refreshing change to the daily training routine for horses and riders. Working with cavaletti strengthens muscles and improves the basic gaits. It enhances a horse’s natural movement by developing rhythm, power, expression, and cadence through engaged steps over obstacles. In addition, cavaletti work trains riders’ seats, gives them better feeling for the horse, and teaches them to see a stride for jumping. This film, featuring Olympic dressage stallion Damon Hill as a young horse, shows everything you need to know to add cavaletti work to your schooling routine.
In stock
Description
Success through Cavaletti Training DVD by Ingrid Klimke
Complicated? Boring? Quite the opposite! Cavaletti work is a refreshing change to the daily training routine for horses and riders. Working with cavaletti strengthens muscles and improves the basic gaits. It enhances a horse’s natural movement by developing rhythm, power, expression, and cadence through engaged steps over obstacles. Riding over cavaletti helps train horses to assess distances that in turn enhance coordination and balance, and when the level of difficulty is increased systematically, horses’ reactions and skills improve significantly. In addition, cavaletti work trains riders’ seats, gives them better feeling for the horse, and teaches them to see a stride for jumping. This film, featuring Olympic dressage stallion Damon Hill as a young horse, shows everything you need to know to add cavaletti work to your schooling routine:
- Cavaletti work in walk and trot on the lunge line
- Ridden at walk, trot, and canter on a straight line and on a circle
- Exercises appropriate for young as well as experienced horses
- Gymnastic jumping exercises
“My father always said to me, ‘Enjoy riding!’ What I enjoy the most is when my horses become even more beautiful as a result of training and when they have learned to respond to very subtle aids.” — Ingrid Klimke