Tag Archives: dressage for the gaited horse

Bit Contact and the Gaited Horse

Lady fox trot
My naturally gaited fox trotting mare, Lady in a quality, balanced fox trot with contact.

What is contact and why have it? How much contact do you need? Is contact and head set the same thing?

Discover why contact is essential for communication between the rider and the naturally gaited horse. Find out how bit acceptance leads to smooth gait. 

Here’s my story…

Contact is a Partnership between the Rider and the Gaited Horse

By Jennifer Klitzke

There are many ways to ride a naturally gaited horse. Some trail ride one handed on a long floppy rein. Others show rail class and ride their gaited horses two handed with contact using a curb bit. Still others, like me, ride dressage with their naturally gaited horse using a snaffle bit with even contact. I’ll explain why I choose the latter, and how dressage benefits my naturally gaited horses to produce relaxation, balance and quality smooth gaits on cue.

Even within dressage, there are different training methods. I have studied two methods since 1988. I began with the United States Dressage Federation (USDF) pyramid of training for competition. Then in 2014 I began studying Ecole de Legerete (School of Lightness) developed from Classical French Dressage by Philippe Karl. Both dressage models begin training with a snaffle bit and teach the horse contact.

My first 24 years of study has been with the USDF pyramid of training which describes rhythm, suppleness, contact, impulsion, straightness and collection.

A few years ago, the USDF changed “connection” to “contact” and “relaxation” to “suppleness.”

Since 2014 my dressage study has been focused on learning the Legerete dressage model. This model identifies respect to the horse as the foundation. Then relaxation (lightness to the hand), balance (lightness to the seat), impulsion (lightness to the leg). Followed by Legerete (lightness), flexibility (suppleness), mobility (straightness and rhythm) and collection (cadence).

Contact is not mentioned in the Legerete model, yet contact is required in order to produce relaxation of the lower jaw, mouth and poll; acceptance of the bit; teaching the horse balance through rein aids to help the horse find chest and shoulder posture to carry its own head and neck and not lean on the bit; and to direct the horse to flexibility and straightness.

Connection (which utilizes the orchestration of rein, leg, seat and weight aids) and contact are essential whether you choose the USDF or Legerete training model. Neither focus on headset per se. (However, there are do’s and don’ts.) Position of the head and neck are outcomes of the contact, connection, and training level of the horse.

What is Contact?

Contact is a two-way dialogue between the rider’s hands and the horse’s mouth. The rider teaches the horse how to accept and follow a light snaffle bit contact and the rider learns to follow the natural head and neck motion of the horse.

There are moments of gentle action. These moments are applied consistently and at the right moment to communicate clarity to the horse. Then there are moments of stillness and quiet of the aids when the horse has responded to the action of the aids.

Contact isn’t pulling back on the reins. Instead, the reins are shortened to make a meaningful light feel of the horse’s mouth with a gentle snaffle bit. The contact doesn’t need to be firm⚊just light enough to be effective. The contact can be as light as the weight of the reins.

Through consistent dressage training, the rider teaches the horse how to accept and follow a snaffle bit contact. While at the same time, the rider learns to follow the horse’s natural head and neck motion with an even and steady feel of both reins to maintain contact with the snaffle bit.

In dressage, the rider follows the natural head and neck motion of the horse with relaxed shoulders, arms and hands. This is true whether the horse is naturally gaited or non-gaited.

For the non-gaited horse, the rider follows the natural head and neck motion at the walk and canter. For the naturally gaited horse, the rider follows the natural head and neck motion at the walk, canter, and smooth gaits, like the flat walk and fox trot. It is important that the rider remains relaxed in their following contact with their arms, shoulders and hands.

The bit acceptance by the horse and the rider’s following the horse’s natural head and neck motion becomes a two-way dialogue of contact.

Benefits of Contact

When a horse accepts and trust the rider’s hands, the horse is able to relax its mouth, tongue, lower jaw, and poll. This relaxation is especially important for the naturally gaited horse.

Why? When gaited horses are tense and resistant in the mouth, they are more likely to be tense in the shoulders and back. This leads to rough and jarring gaits like step pacing, hard pacing and hard trot.

Relaxation leads to the smooth gaits the horse was destined for and the smooth gaits we enjoy riding.

naturally gaited flat walk
A good riding program develops the horse’s best natural quality smooth gaits on cue.

A relaxed contact leads to smooth gaits

For quality smooth gaits, it is important that we teach our naturally gaited horses how accept the bit, trust our hands, and relax their lower jaw. As riders, we need to ride with soft hands and follow the horse’s natural head motion. We also need to use a comfortable bit that doesn’t pinch within the mouth and wide enough not to pinch the corners of the mouth.

Learning effective contact as a rider is the first step. Then we need to teach our naturally gaited horse how to accept the bit and follow our rein aids. We need to follow their natural head and neck motion. All of this develops a two-way dialog. Then when the horse becomes tense, we can help them relax their lower jaw and poll. We can help them relax by lightly massaging the inside rein until they soften. Then we need to immediately stop massaging the rein and return both hands to a neutral position with a light following contact.

Stopping the cue as the horse responds to our cue is just as important as the timing of the initial cue. Consistency in communication with our horse is the key.

How to teach contact to the gaited horse

In-hand exercises are a great way to teach contact. In hand exercises help our horses learn how to accept and follow contact. They also learn how to develop a balanced posture without leaning on our hands. When a horse leans on the bit, it is slouching. The horse collapses its chest and shoulders and gets heavy on the forehand.

teaching the horse how to follow contact

The earlier a two-way dialogue is taught the easier it will be for the horse and rider. However, horses that have had a harsh bit experience may take longer to trust a rider’s hands. Yet, with patience, understanding, and gentle consistency, horses can regain trust.

Teaching bit acceptance and following contact

Working in hand is the best place to start teaching our horses to accept contact with the bit and follow our hands. Working in hand can also teach our horses a posture of balance instead of leaning on the bit.

Watch this video: Teaching contact in-hand

Any time the horse leans on the bit, the rider standing in front of the horse immediately responds not with force, but with gentle upward nudges towards the ears with both snaffle rings, to say, “No leaning on the bit.” These upward nudges encourage the horse to lift its head and neck, “high enough to be light,” as one of my coaches says. It reminds the horse to find a posture of balance. It is just as important that the rider immediately stops the upward nudges as soon as the horse is light and tasting the bit.

If the horse isn’t tasting the bit, the rider, while still facing the horse, can rotate the bit slightly and slowing to gently turn the horse’s head so the ears point toward the 11 o’clock position and then gently to the 1 o’clock position. This can help the horse begin to relax the jaw and tongue and taste the bit. By making communication clear to the horse, the rider helps the horse learn relaxation with the bit and find its own balance without leaning on the hands of the rider.

After learning contact in hand, then the rider teaches the horse the same exercises from the saddle at a halt. Then the rider can progress to a slow walk.

Watch video: Teaching contact in saddle

These are common Legerete exercises. I have been fortunate to learn from three French Dressage instructors who have studied Legerete with Master Instructors. Book and DVD study is helpful, but nothing beats one-on-one coaching for timely personalized instruction.

Watch video: Flechi droit

Here’s a great warm up exercise that stretches the outside neck muscles. It isn’t an exercise I have ever seen with the USDF model, but it is one common to Legerete: flechi droit.

Through this work in hand, flexions in saddle at a halt and slow walk, us riders can learn meaningful contact with our horse’s mouth using both reins with even and steady contact through the snaffle bit. The rein aids converse with our horse to position its head and neck, as well as to soften and relax the jaw, slow and rebalance. All of these preparatory exercises lead us to effective two-way communication, quality smooth gaits, as well as a partnership of harmony with our naturally gaited horses.

So what happens when the horse leans on the bit while you are riding?

Here’s my story…

Bit resistance or imbalance?

Some horses accept contact better than others. My naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse, Makana, accepts and follows contact well at a halt and walk. Yet, sometimes she leans on the bit and gets heavy in my hands at the running walk and canter.

For Makana, this heaviness in my hands isn’t a bit-acceptance problem. It is a symptom of too much weight on her shoulders⚊slouching on the chest. To correct, I need to remind her with upward nudges, so she repositions her chest posture and rebalances. It is easier to rebalance at a halt or slow walk. The faster she travels out of balance, the more challenging it is to rebalance with the upward nudges. This is where additional exercises come in to play.

Counter bend with contact
Counter bend with contact teaches the naturally gaited horse to move balance from one shoulder to the other.


I also reposition her balance from one shoulder to the other with counter bend neck rein exercises. Other exercises such as shoulder in, haunches in, shoulder out and renver help her shift more weight bearing to the hindquarters.

Naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse shoulder-In with contact
Naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse shoulder-In with contact.

Once Makana rebalances her posture, she becomes lighter to my hand since her weight is carried more evenly over all four legs. In this balanced posture, the quality of her flat walk improves.

Naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse flat walk with contact
Naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse flat walk with contact

Bit Acceptance vs Bit Avoidance

One of the goals of contact is to help the horse develop bit acceptance. This is when the horse seeks contact with the bit while following the rider’s rein requests. The horse begins to trust the rider’s hands because the rein aids are gentle, clear, and consistent and cease once the horse has responded to the cue.

Riding with a light meaningful even contact is a dialogue with the horse. There are moments of quiet hands because the horse is responding to the rider’s request. Then there are moments of using the hand or hands to help the horse soften the jaw, flex the poll, flex to one side or the other, open the poll and extend the neck forward, or nudge the hands upward when the horse leans on the bit to ask the horse to carry its own head and neck.

Bit avoidance is what you don’t want. This self-protective measure happens when the horse doesn’t trust the rider’s hands. Bit avoidance can occur when the horse feels pain in its mouth, distrusts the hands of a rider, or has mental scars from past experiences.

Horses learn bit avoidance when:

  • Being ridden in a harsh or poorly fitting bit
  • Being ridden with low, fixed hands
  • Being ridden with unclear or inconsistent rein aids
  • Being ridden with sharp, unfloated teeth
  • Being ridden with loose reins and suddenly surprises the horse with firm contact
  • Being ridden with too much contact or when the rider finds their balance holding onto the horse’s mouth through the reins

Horses have great memories, and mental scars are not easy to overcome. It will take even more time, patience, consistency and gentleness to earn the horse’s trust with your hands over time.

Here’s my story…

Avoiding contact: Finding a key to unlock an unknown past

My naturally gaited fox trotting mare, Lady, is a marvelous trail horse who loves to be ridden on a long floppy rein. Only, leaving it up to her, she travels heavily on the shoulders where she is prone to tripping. This unbalanced state isn’t safe, and it isn’t the balance we seek in dressage.

Adding to this is her unknown history. Some horses, like Lady, come into our lives with mental scars. Lady is a grade horse from a sale barn. In her case, she was 7-12 years old when she arrived. Difficult to catch. Nose in the air. Hard to bridle. Once bridled, Lady was bit resistant. She would snatch the bit out of your hands and run off in a hard hollow trot.

Lady’s teeth have been checked and floated regularly. She has learned the same in-hand exercises my naturally gaited Tennessee Walking Horse knows. I have tried numerous bits, even a bitless bridle. I was about to give up until I tried one more bit: a sweet copper, hollow-mouthed, loose-ring snaffle with a lozenge.

Lady immediately accepted a light contact with this bit. Is it the flavor? Is it the thickness? Is it the lozenge? Is it the combination. It didn’t matter. I was thrilled I finally found a bit she liked where she and I could begin a two-way dialogue of contact.

Lady fox trot
My naturally gaited fox-trotting mare, Lady in a quality, balanced fox trot with contact.


Lady accepts the bit much better, and I follow her natural head and neck motion with relaxed shoulders, arms and hands. Her fox trot is regular, smooth, relaxed, and has steady rhythm with balance and more tempo without breaking into a trot. She is now learning to collect more in her fox trot for the full range of motion.

Gaited horse fox trot on a long rein with contact
Naturally gaited fox-trotting horse ridden on a long rein with contact while maintaining balance.


Months have passed. Then I re-introduced the Fulmer snaffle. Lady accepted it just as she had the hollow-mouthed snaffle.

Adding to this, we began counter bend exercises on a serpentine, on a square, on a circle, and on a figure eight. These shoulder balancing exercises have been making an ENORMOUS difference in Lady’s mobility, balance and lightness.

balanced fox trot with contact
Fox trot with contact.


Now we have added shoulder in and haunches in to our rides with lots of neck extensions as a reward.

Shoulder in on a circle with contact
Shoulder in on a circle with contact at a slow walk.


Then we began shoulder in on a circle at a slow walk to encourage her to engage more. The engagement helps to tip her pelvis downward, bend her hock joints, activate her abdominal muscles to lift her back to a rounder position, lift her chest and shoulders so that the energy from behind travels through her back, neck and to the bit.

The result of contact and connection with Lady is a smooth, relaxed natural fox trot with even strides, rhythm, relaxation, and balance for longer periods of time.

According to the USDF model, as the horse progresses in its dressage training (third level and higher), a curb bit may be added along with the snaffle bit (bradoon). The rider uses two reins in each hand, yet continues to ride with contact using the snaffle bit predominately and the curb bit secondary to find tune the horse.

Lady and I may never reach third-level dressage, but that’s okay. We have found a key to unlock the mystery of contact and connection using a mild snaffle bit.

Finding the right bit can make a difference for the naturally gaited horse to promote bit acceptance. This can lead to relaxation of the mouth and jaw that relaxes the back for natural smooth gaits.

Why have contact?


I rode at a few clinics with Susan Norman who is a French dressage instructor. She was fortunate to have been a three-year student of Philippe Karl and a 15-year student of the late Jean Claude Racinet.

During my lessons, Susan would say:

“There is no intimacy
with a long floppy rein.”

why have contact

Neither the USDF or Legerete dressage models train horses into self carriage by riding on a long floppy rein. That doesn’t mean in dressage that horses are never ridden on a loose rein. What this means is the release to a loose rein has a purpose that the horse understands. Horses need to be educated in a partnership of contact where the rider releases the horse to a loose rein for moments at a time when the horse is in a position of balance and relaxation and in the desired frame chosen by the rider (not the horse). The release is a reward.

Loose reins need a consistent place and purpose in the horse’s training to be effective.

If the reins are loose without a purpose, it leaves the horse wondering what the rider wants. Naturally the horse makes decisions of its own about position, direction, tempo, gait, eating grass, wondering off, or heading back to its buddies. Then the reins are quickly snapped up with abrupt contact. The horse is punished in the mouth and doesn’t know why. This leads to bit avoidance.

In addition, it is true that many naturally gaited horses travel smooth on a long floppy rein. Lady is one of them. However, her natural way of going is hollow, disengaged and on the shoulders as seen below.

Out of balance and no contact
Out of balance and no contact. The horse is on the forehand. Can you see how the shoulder and pectoral muscles are collapsed, the hollow back, the disengaged hindquarter and how much more weight is on the forehand?

While Lady’s gait is smooth while traveling with her nose to the ground, it isn’t good for her soundness long term, nor is it a two-way dialogue with me. It’s kind of like being at the dinner table with family and everyone is on their cell phone. She’s there, yet not present. Plus, she is prone to tripping.

Contact is a partnership between horse and rider

A better approach is to first establish a partnership of contact with Lady through mental and physical relaxation, engagement, and establishing chest posture and balance. This will help Lady trip less.

Lady neck extension in smooth gait with western saddle
Here’s a better position for my naturally gaited fox trotting mare, Lady to develop her top line muscles. She is stepping more under her body mass with her hind leg, less hollow, lifting her pectoral muscles while extending her head and neck out and down without getting too low.

Then developing flexibility and strength to help Lady become ambidextrous for quality smooth gaits and the full range of motion. This will help Lady maintain soundness longer for more years of riding.

Then I add impulsion (forwardness without rushing) and release Lady to a loose rein as long as she is in balance. I will retake the contact and restore the balance if she begins to fall on the shoulders and forehand. I offer releases to a long rein with contact or loose rein in self carriage during each riding session.

Contact to Connection: Importance of Separating Stop and Go Aids

The effective use and timing of aids rein, leg, seat and weight aids produce connection with the horse to communicate position, tempo, gait, direction, engagement and lateral movements while maintaining relaxation and balance. This partnership of contact and connection lead to harmony where each ride is more like a dance.

The rein aids have a purpose to help the horse relax the tongue, lower jaw, flex the poll, bend the neck side to side, position the neck up and down, direct the shoulders, help the horse be balanced, and closed fingers communicate halt.

The seat, leg and weight aids also have a purpose to direct tempo, forwardness, engagement, and direction. The goal is to teach the horse to responding to the lightest aid. Then the rider needs to stop cueing once the horse responds. This takes consistent training on the rider’s part to achieve.

After studying the USDF and Legerete methods. I find the French dressage more effective in that the stopping aids of the rein are not used at the exact same time as going forward aids of the leg and seat. Combining the legs and driving seat aids with the hand aids is like driving a car with one foot on the brake and the other foot on the gas at the same time. I have found that combining the stop and go aids to be unproductive and confusing to the horse, and actually makes it difficult to teach lightness.

Here’s my story…

Why won’t my horse go?

I applied the USDF model for the first five years of training my naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse, Makana. My understanding of this model was to drive my horse forward with my legs and seat into my hands for contact and connection.

Adding to this, many TWH rail class riders told me to ride with low fixed hands and minimize the movement of my riding position to show how smooth my horse is.

Makana lacked the desire to go forward. I thought I had a lazy horse, so I used more and more leg to squeeze her forward. That didn’t seem to help, so I tapped her with a dressage whip while I clucked and squeezed her forward. Then Makana became anxious, and I didn’t know why.

It wasn’t until I began studying French dressage that I realized what was going on. When I began separating my hand aids for stopping from my leg and seat aids for going, I realized I had created Makana’s lack-of-forwardness problem. She was doing exactly what I had been cueing her to do: go forward into my hand and stop. Then she began to feel claustrophobic as a result of being driven forward into a restraining hand.

In addition, French dressage taught me that riding with low fixed hands presses the bit into the tongue and causes pain. Rather, I learned that by communicating with the corners of the horse’s lips is gentle, so I cue with raised hands and ride with relaxed following shoulders, arms and hands. I also learned the difference between driving with the seat and following the natural motion of the horse’s belly sway. The latter actually produces more forwardness than a driving seat because a driving seat is irritating to the horse.

By separating the “stop” from “go” aids, Makana’s lack of forwardness has disappeared. My need to continually use my leg and whip disappeared. She has also become less anxious and spooky ask a result of not being restrained by fixed low hands and a rigid body to make her look smooth.

Watch video: Naturally Gaited Tennessee Walking Horse Gaits

Naturally gaited TWH flat walk and running walk.

While applying dressage with my naturally gaited horses, contact and connection have led to enormous changes in posture balance, relaxation, engagement, and rhythm to produce quality smooth gaits and full range of motion.

Enjoy the journey to smoother gaits, naturally and humanely with dressage!


I hope this is helpful. Let me know your thoughts by sending a message.

Visit website: NaturallyGaitedHorse.com
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Relaxation of Mind and Body Lead to Smooth Gaits

Relaxation of mind and body leads to smooth natural gaits

Did you buy a gaited horse and wonder why it isn’t always smooth? Helping your gaited horse relax in mind & body is a great place to start.

Here’s my story…

Relaxation of Mind & Body Lead to Smooth Gaits

By Jennifer Klitzke

If you bought your naturally gaited horse, such as a Tennessee walking horse, Missouri Fox Trotter, or Rocky Mountain for its smooth ride and wondered why it isn’t always smooth, I’m with you. The smooth natural gaits are genetic, yet they need to be developed. Some naturally gaited horses are easier than others to train.

I bought my naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse as a three-year-old with 20 rides on her. In one lap of our arena, she demonstrated lots of smooth natural gaits and a few bumpy ones. I quickly discovered that it was up to me as the rider to identify and put cues to each gait so that I train my horse instead of my horse train me.

Dressage is the form of riding I apply with my naturally gaited horses. Why? Because dressage teaches the horse relaxation of mind and body, balance, forwardness without rushing, rhythm, connection, symmetry, and collection. Over time the horse develops its full range of motion and quality smooth gaits on cue for long-term soundness.

Why I begin with relaxation of mind and body

Each time I ride, relaxation of mind and body are essential ingredients to achieving smooth natural gaits. In fact, I cannot achieve quality smooth gaits without relaxation. Relaxation of mind is free from worry and anxiety. The horse is able to be in a dialogue of communication with me. Our conversation is more the focus than what is going on around us. Relaxation of body is free from tension and bracing so the horse is able to move comfortably forward without rushing.

I ride and train two uniquely different naturally gaited horses: my Tennessee walking horse, Makana and my foxtrotting mare, Lady. Makana can get anxious on a windy day when trees come alive. She is not in a trainable mind until she is relaxed. If I were to continue riding Makana while she is anxious, it only reinforces the anxiety and teaches her to rush into a poor-quality gait.

Relaxation of mind

On days where Makana is anxious, we work in hand and do lateral flexions in hand or in the saddle at a halt to help her relax her mouth, lower jaw and poll and stretch her muscles. This helps her partner up with me. Then we proceed with training in a state of relaxation to produce quality smooth gaits.

Watch: Flat Walk and Running Walk by a Naturally Gaited Tennessee Walking Horse

My naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse, Makana and I. When she is relaxed in her mind, it transfers through her entire body and brings about quality smooth gaits.

Lady is pretty unflappable on windy days. She rarely spooks or gets anxious, like Makana, but Lady came with bit resistance. She would tense her lower jaw and poll which transferred tension throughout her body and back. If Lady were to remain in a state of body tension, she would travel faster and faster until she blasted off into a hard trot.

Relaxation of body

For Lady, before we begin riding, I lead her into relaxation of her mouth, lower jaw, and poll. After she is soft and flexible, then Lady settles into her natural smooth gait.

2021 Lady's smooth gait with contact
Lady’s smooth gait today has more relaxation, balance and lightness.

Anytime either horse becomes tense or anxious, I slow down or halt, re-establish relaxation and resume the riding session. Without relaxation of mind and body, there is no quality smooth gaits.

With relaxation of mind and body, quality smooth gaits follow. That means relaxation transforms my naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse’s step pace into quality smooth gaits, such as a four-beat flat walk and a lateral canter into a three-beat canter. For Lady, relaxation transforms her hard trot into a natural smooth gait.

Watch: How to Introduce the Gaited Horse to Accept and Follow Snaffle Bit Contact

Relaxation of mind and body are key to smooth gaits.

What are your thoughts? Please reach out and send me a message or stay connected by subscribing to the Naturally Gaited youtube channel and “like” us on facebook.com/naturallygaited.

Resolving Resistance with French Dressage

naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse in a piaffe

If I encounter resistance in French dressage, does it mean I am doing it wrong? Or does it mean French dressage is not for naturally gaited horses? Is resistance to be expected? Then how can it be overcome?

Here’s my story…

Resolving Resistance with French Dressage

By Jennifer Klitzke

I have been inspired and have learned so much through my French dressage DVD and book study over the years. I love the harmony the riders have with their horses and how happy the horses express themselves. Thankfully, my horses are happy most of the time. However, resistance pops up when I ask for something new or challenging. How do I know? Their body language says, “NO!” When I ask, they immediately tense, swish their tail, or rush. This doesn’t look like the harmony I see on the DVDs.

Clearly, I am nowhere near the expertise of the French dressage masters shown on the DVDs. This makes me wonder: Am I doing French dressage wrong when I experience resistance? Am I the one creating the resistance? How do I negotiate moving forward in training with my naturally gaited horses without resistance? Is a resistant-free relationship with horses possible? Have my naturally gaited horses reached their fullest potential?

Or could it be resistance is part of any relationship―horses and humans? The differences are whether I acknowledge or avoid resistance and how I work through it. 

Think about it. How successful is avoiding conflict with the people in our lives? Every time we avoid conflict or pretend it isn’t there, the conflict doesn’t go away. It seems to grow bigger when unaddressed. A small conflict becomes all consuming. Now we wish we had addressed it when it was a small matter, right? I wonder if this could be the same for conflict with our horses?

Perhaps resistance means a need for clarification. Perhaps resistance means, let’s slow down, take it step by step and better understand each other. Let’s negotiate through this to a positive outcome where our relationship can be even better on the other side. Perhaps resistance is an opportunity to help my horses experience the potential they haven’t yet realized. Perhaps resistance is an opportunity to seek others for more education to better communicate with my horse.

My naturally gaited Tennessee Walking Horse, Makana, is light to the hand at the halt and walk, yet heavier at a flat walk and canter. I feel like I am in a perpetual demi arret (lifting of the hands). I wonder, “Am I doing French dressage wrong? Is French dressage not for naturally gaited horses?”

For my naturally gaited horse Lady, we have made tremendous improvement this summer by applying French dressage: acceptance of the bit, relaxation of the jaw, tasting the bit, flexions and counter bend turns to move the shoulders. We have established a light following contact with the reins at a halt and walk. Yet, when we move from walk to fox trot, she gets heavy in my hands unless I ride her in a floppy rein. I feel like I am doing a perpetual demi arret to keep her from leaning on my hands. Again, I wonder, “Am I doing French dressage wrong? Is French dressage not for naturally gaited horses?”

Or could it be a mix of application and communication through conflict?

Meeting resistance with dialogue

In October 2020, I was thrilled to bring my naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse, Makana, to another French dressage clinic with Linda Kaye Hollingsworth Jones. In addition to my lessons and auditing the other rider’s sessions, I brought my questions.

Linda has forty years of horse training experience and rode each horse to help instruct the rider. She quickly discovered the horse’s asymmetry to help the rider develop a program that can improve the horse’s balance, strength and flexibility. 

What do you think occurred each time asymmetry was addressed with a horse? Resistance. For me, watching her calmly address and resolve resistance with French dressage answered many of my questions.

I witnessed astonishing transformations as Linda worked with each horse through resistance. For some horses, it meant stepping under the body with the inside hind leg an inch or two more for greater collection and expression. For others, it meant lightness to the leg bringing responsiveness to the lightest cue. For others it meant clarifying aids.

Yes, resistance is a realistic part training horses and French dressage is a humane and kind way to work through it for the best outcome. 

Afterwards, one of the auditors asked, “How do you know if the resistance means the horse is unclear or unable to do what is requested?” 

“Great question,” Linda replied, “Forty years of horse training.” 

Linda’s answer is why I keep pursuing more knowledge through reading books, watching DVDs and taking lessons.

Effective Timing of the Aids

In terms of the demi arret (upward actions with the rein(s) to say to the horse “stop leaning on the bit”), the trotting horse riders struggled with heaviness in trot and canter just as I have in gait and canter. Linda helped us understand the importance of effective timing in the demi arret and décent des mains (stop acting with the hands). The demi arret needs to be applied BEFORE the horse thinks about leaning on the bit and BEFORE the horse is heavy.

Seeing that both resistance and heaviness exist with the non-gaited horses encouraged me to know this is not a gaited horse issue.

downward canter transition
Downward canter transition without collapsing onto the forehand.

Linda coached me and my naturally gaited Tennessee Walking Horse through resistance to a better outcome. Traver-walk transitions began to transform Makana’s lateral left lead canter into a more quality three-beat canter. The pro-active pre-timing and application of our demi arret and décent des mains kept our canter light. Our canter transitions and piaffe quality had improved over the previous clinic.

For me, this clinic answered my questions. French dressage is a way to resolve resistance in the most humane way to a better outcome instead of avoiding conflict and staying stuck. Persevering with an instructor who is in the know helps me discern what is possible and dialogue through conflict to a better ending.

Resistance doesn’t look like harmony. Neither does avoidance. When resistance is met with understanding, kindness, and an educated rider, resistance leads to harmony.

Yes, French dressage is for naturally gaited horses, too! Thanks to French dressage, we are working on upper-level movements, such as shoulder-in, haunches-in, renver, half pass, walk pirouettes, counted walk, half steps, and piaffe which are improving her balance and the quality of her canter.

Piaffe is a great exercise for the naturally gaited horse to improve canter quality and diagonalize lateral gaits.

naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse in a piaffe

I hope this is helpful. Let me know your thoughts by sending a message.

Visit website: NaturallyGaitedHorse.com
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USA Légèreté with Linda Kaye Hollingsworth-Jones

Nothing beats one-on-one coaching.

My naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse and I put 7 years of DVD and book study to practice at the Légèreté clinic with Linda Kaye Hollingsworth-Jones. 

USA Légèreté with Linda Kaye Hollingsworth-Jones

By Jennifer Klitzke

In October 2019, owners Rick and Kari of the Schmitt Training Center in Sommerset, WI hosted the first Midwestern Légèreté clinic with Certified Master Instructor Bertrand Ravoux from France. This year COVID-19 put a halt to Bertrand’s USA travels. We’ve also learned that further clinics with him need to be filled with committed instructor-in-training students to expand USA Légèreté.

So this year Rick and Kari reached out to USA Légèreté Level One Certified Instructor Linda Kaye Hollingsworth-Jones of Idaho to continue our study. I was thrilled to participate as a student with my naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse, Makana. She was the only gaited horse among impressive breeds: Lusitano, Zweibrücken, Selle Français, Holsteiner, Dutch Warmblood, Norwegian Fjord, Arabian and Thoroughbred. Horses and riders ranged from starting Légèreté to those schooling, extended trot, tempe changes, and piaffe.

My DVD library of Classical French Dressage Master Philippe Karl that I continue to resource as I learn this method with my naturally gaited horses and trotting horses.
My DVD library of Classical French Dressage Master Philippe Karl that I continue to resource as I learn this method with my naturally gaited horses and trotting horses.

Last year’s clinic with Bertrand Ravoux was a perfect introduction to Légèreté. This year, Linda’s clinic took me to the next level of understanding. Not only is she a knowledgeable and experienced rider, trainer and teacher of Légèreté, she is hilarious, personable, and gives each student and horse 110% attention. 

The first day, Linda began by riding each horse through the Légèreté  program to realize the horse’s needs. 

The Légèreté program begins at a slow, organized walk in this sequence of exercises:

  • Fléchi droit: stretching the outside neck muscles while the horse’s body remains straight
  • Neck extensions: stretching the spine and top line while maintaining balance
  • Counter bends: checking shoulder mobility
  • Shoulder in and haunches in on a circle: checking hindquarter mobility
  • Transitions between shoulder in and haunches in along the wall in preparation for half pass
  • Half pass to reverse pirouette
  • Then checking the trot (or gait) and canter

We watched Linda ride each horse in relaxation and lightness to the hand and leg through this sequence of exercises and beyond. We watched her organize her aids to organize each horse into balance. Within 20 minutes, we even watched her ride the advanced horses in extended trot, tempe changes and piaffe!

Riding unfamiliar horses. Horses that didn’t know her. Some were new to the program of Légèreté. Within 20 minutes Linda had a plan to meet each horse’s needs. This truly demonstrated her vast  riding and training knowledge and abilities. Plus, she had the endurance to provide each student 110% through the three-day clinic. Wow!

Each student rode the remainder of the lesson(s) while Linda coached them through the program of Légèreté and into their horse’s training needs:

  • Teaching the rider to organize their rein, leg, seat and weight aids
  • Coaching the rider to organize the horse into balance, lightness, and engagement beginning at a slow organized walk and then into an organized trot (or gait) and canter
  • Organized for the horse means as slow as needed in each gait so that all four legs are under the horse’s body mass

Some of the horses at the clinic were gifted with elegant, long-striding movement. This includes Makana, my naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse who loves to be long from nose to tail. Long-striding gaits make up part of the full range of motion. Horses also need to develop  shorter, collected, carrying steps. These body-building movements develop different muscles and a more balanced posture by folding the hindquarters and bending the hock joints. This collection helps the horse sit behind more in order to raise the wither and lift the chest, head and neck.

Since long-striding movement comes naturally for Makana, Linda introduced her to a more collected and organized walk and smooth gait using the exercises and progression of Légèreté . The organized smooth gait is shorter steps that are more balanced where all four legs are beneath the body mass. This is new for Makana as I have always pursued the longest stride length in her smooth gait. This doesn’t mean I replace the long striding smooth gaits, the organized smooth gait is another smooth gait on cue that builds new muscles for the full range of motion.

The purpose of the shorter-striding movements are not to replace the long-striding gaits, rather improve them and expand upon the full range of motion.

fléchi droit
Fléchi droit is a warm up exercise that stretches the outside neck muscles while riding the horse’s body straight. This teaches the horse how to travel in a straight line with the neck bent 45-90 degrees to the inside before teaching circles. This exercise teaches the horse to be balanced equally on both shoulders without collapsing to the inside shoulder. It is important to establish this shoulder balance before teaching circles, otherwise the horse will learn to fall onto the inside shoulder.
fléchi droit
Linda coaching me in a fléchi droit on a circle where I organize my aids to organize the horse to stretch the outside neck muscles while riding her body on the arc of a circle.
Neck extension
Neck extension: Allowing the horse to stretch out and down, yet not lower than the poll (between the ears) at wither height in order to maintain balance.
neck extension
Linda coaching me from the fléchi droit to a neck extension to stretch without rushing or falling on the forehand. I raise my hands so that I make contact with the less sensitive corners of my horse’s lips instead of pulling back with low hands that would press on the tongue.
Counter bend neck rein turns
Counter bend neck rein turns are the next exercise to see how mobile the horse’s shoulders are. This can be done on a serpentine, circle, square or random squiggle.
Counter bend neck rein turns
Linda coaches me in organizing my rein aids in timing with my horse’s front leg steps. First slightly bend to the outside and see the outside eye, then draw both hands over as the horse steps forward with the outside leg and to the inside with the inside leg which shifts weight to the inside shoulder.
Travere or Haunches In
Shoulder in, Travere or Haunches In on a circle are great exercises to test the mobility of the hind leg stepping under the belly. In Legerete, the angle varies according to what the horse needs in building mobility instead of sticking to a rule of three tracks.
Travere or Haunches In
After shoulder in, Linda coaches me in organizing my rein, leg, seat and weight aids to draw my horse’s haunches into the circle in proper timing with her outside hind leg stepping under her belly.
Renvers or haunches out
Renvers or haunches out is another exercise to check the mobility of the hindquarters.
half pass
Then we proceeded to shoulder in and haunches in along the wall to prepare for half pass. Linda rides Makana from the wall to the centerline in a half pass at a walk. Then at the centerline, she directs Makana into a reversed pirouette.
half pass
The shoulder in and travere prepare my horse for the half pass. Here Linda coaches me in organizing my rein, leg, seat and weight aids to organize Makana to equally step under and over with the hind leg and over with the shoulder in the direction of the bend.
Organized Smooth Gait
Once Makana became more balanced, light and engaged through the exercises, Linda asks for an organized and balanced smooth gait which is on the fox trot spectrum.
Rein back
Linda coaches me through several transitions of rein back to organized walk. The rein back steps need to be smaller so that she sits behind.
poll flexion
Makana maintains a nice poll flexion in the rein back, organized walk, and  lateral exercises yet tends to open the poll at the organized smooth gait.
Organized smooth gait
Linda helps me organize the poll flexion at an organized walk before the transition to the organized smooth gait.

Then Linda coached me through transitions of organized walk travere (haunches in) on a small volte to the organized smooth gait, as well as transitions of rein back to organized walk and organized smooth gait. These transitions help Makana fold more behind, sit, engage and be higher in the wither and lifted in the chest, head and neck. Her organized smooth gait still has a head nod, yet not as pronounced as the flat walk.

rein back
Linda is coaching us with two whips. One asks the hind legs not to step behind the tail and to fold more. The other whip encourages the haunches to bend.
piaffe steps
Linda says that a true piaffe is when the hind quarters bend and lower, the base becomes shorter, and the wither raises. A true piaffe doesn’t need a jump step. Some horses gifted in passage have a harder time learning piaffe and tend to passage in place. They have a harder time shortening the base.
cantering the gaited horse
The final exercise Linda coaches us through is rein back to steps of piaffe to canter. Because piaffe is a diagonal gait, it is great for the gaited horse to learn in order to improve canter quality.

For me, being a student with my naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse in this Légèreté clinic connected many dots in my book and DVD studies. Linda thanked me for bringing such a well-schooled Tennessee walking horse to the clinic—something outside the norm (both a gaited horse at a Légèreté clinic and a well-schooled Tennessee walking horse in Légèreté principles).

My biggest Légèreté clinic takeaways with Linda

The importance of being an organized rider

  • The organization and effective timing of the rider’s leg, rein, seat, and weight aids in order for the horse to become organized

The importance of rider awareness of the horse being light to the hand and leg

  • Becoming immediately aware of heaviness on the rein with a prompt demi-arête and immediate release when the horse stops being heavy
  • Becoming aware of the horse’s light responsiveness to the leg and following up with the whip when needed and an immediate cease of the leg or whip when the horse responds

The sequential progression of the Legerete program

  • Flechi droit: stretching the outside neck muscles
  • Neck extension: stretching the spine and top line
  • Counter bends: checking the mobility of the shoulders
  • Shoulder in and haunches in on a circle: checking the mobility of the hindquarters
  • Shoulder in and haunches in along the wall in preparation for half pass
  • Half pass to reverse pirouette
  • Then checking the trot (or gait) and canter
  • Then once my horse is in balance, maintain it through the next neck extension; the importance of not throwing the horse onto the shoulders once balance has been established

Redirecting Makana’s ideas of opening the poll at will by teaching her poll flexion

  • Allowing the horse an open poll is one thing; the horse choosing an open poll is another and Linda helped me become aware of this

The importance of continual transitions between exercises, gaits, and direction to improve balance, lightness, strength, and lightness

  • Riding transitions often pointed out to me my need to ride more of them, such as preparing Makana in an organized walk on a counter bend volte or a haunches in volte before releasing her to an organized gait down the long side of the arena and transitioning to an organized walk volte at the other end instead of riding several minutes of consecutive unorganized gait

The importance of working the horse’s full range of motion not just the gaits that come natural for the horse

  • This means educating the horse in stretching and body-building exercises both laterally and longitudinally, actively forward and long elegant strides, as well as slow, engaged, short, balanced, carrying steps to improve the quality of all gaits and full range of motion

Using diagonal exercises to break lateral movement such as improving canter quality using diagonal transition exercises as rein back to piaffe to canter and shoulder in and travere on a volte at an organized walk to an organized smooth gait

Teach the horse how mobilize its shoulders in balance

  • Last year Bertrand introduced the counter-bend turns to mobilize the shoulders which has made both of my naturally gaited horses much lighter, more balanced and has improved Lady’s gaits
  • For the horse that is heavy on the forehand (collapsing one or both shoulders) and continually leaning on the hands, a terrific exercise is counter bending the horse just enough to see the outside eye and neck reining with both hands to the opposite direction in timing with the shoulder movements. This is key!
  • By neck rein, it means that the rider draws both hands to the opposite side of the bend. This teaches the horse to move the shoulders. If the horse isn’t moving the shoulders, then the rider makes sideways nudges in timing with the front leg steps until the horse moves or a light tap with the whip on the outside shoulder. (Don’t use the inside leg in this exercise because it will talk to the hind leg instead of the shoulder). This is also key! 
  • This counter bend neck rein exercise can be done on a circle, figure 8, or serpentine changing the bend at each short side to the counter bend and walking straight between bends to the next counter bend loop. Or in a random squiggle so that the horse has to pay attention to the rider

Friends, I highly encourage you to purchase Philippe Karl’s DVDs and books.

Book: Twisted Truths of Modern Dressage

DVDs: Classical vs Classique
Classical Dressage, Parts 1-4

The School of Légèreté, Parts 1 & 2

You will not be disappointed. If you live near a Légèreté clinic, it is a must see! There is discussion about having Linda back for another clinic. No doubt, I will be there as an auditor or rider for sure.

Ecole de Légèreté 

I will continue to share approved photos from the Ecole de Légèreté community on the Naturally Gaited Facebook page. Make sure you “like” and “follow” to stay connected.

flechi droit
Practicing flechi droit at home after the clinic.

Stay tuned. I share my application of what I learned in the clinic with my naturally gaited horses in future posts. I am especially excited to apply all that I learned with Lady, my naturally gaited fox trotting horse in helping her be light to the hand and help my naturally gaited Tennessee walking horse be more balanced.

rein back
Practicing rein back with smaller steps that bend and fold the hind quarters.
piaffe
Since the clinic our piaffe steps are becoming more purely diagonal.

If you are on this gaited dressage journey, I’d love to hear from you. Contact us»

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Counter Bend Balance for the Gaited Horse

Counter bend
Counter bend with neck rein moves balance from the outside shoulder to the inside shoulder.

Do you have a gaited horse that’s heavy on the forehand and leans on the bit? Counter bend exercises have helped my gaited horses find balance and lightness.

Counter Bend Balance and Lightness for the Naturally Gaited Horse

By Jennifer Klitzke

For years I rode true bends along the arc of on a circle as I trained my non gaited and gaited horses. While the true bend helps the horse strengthen the inside hind leg as it steps under its body mass, it wasn’t helping my naturally gaited horse find balance and lightness through the shoulders.

Why? Because my horses were on the forehand and I needed to teach a shoulder moving exercise before introducing true bend exercises. It wasn’t until I learned a simple but effective exercise called the counter bend neck rein turn that we found lightness, straightness and balance in the shoulders.

What is a Counter Bend Neck Rein Turn?

Introduced to me during a French dressage clinic, the counter bend neck rein turn became a game-changer on our journey towards balance. This exercise shifts the horse’s balance from the outside shoulder to the inside shoulder. The horse’s outside foreleg steps forward while the inside foreleg steps into the circle as if the horse is extending sideways. It is a terrific exercise to help the horse find shoulder balance, straightness, and lightness.

How Counter Bends are True

After this clinic I began applying counter bend neck rein turns with my naturally gaited horses. This exercise began at a slow walk before increasing the tempo to a slow smooth gait. We did counter bend turns in a variety of patterns such as serpentines, squares, figure eights, circles and random turns any time we needed to regain balance and lightness in the shoulders.

To my amazement, the counter bend neck rein turns have freed up my horses’ shoulders and improved the quality of our true bends. My naturally gaited horses have become lighter in my hands because they are less on the forehand and more balanced overall.

Counter bend
Counter bend with neck rein turn moves balance from the outside shoulder to the inside shoulder.

Steps to the Counter Bend Neck Rein Turn:

  1. With an equal light contact with both reins riding in a snaffle bit, I position the horse just enough to see the outside eye while keeping the neck straight.
  2. To turn, I draw both hands toward the inside of the circle (opposite side of the bend) with gentle nudges in timing with the inside shoulder as it begins to lift forward. This encourages the inside leg to move forward and slightly into the circle. The outside leg continues straight and forward. The front legs do not cross over the inside leg for the counter bend turn.
  3. Important tip: This is a shoulder moving exercise, not a hindquarter moving exercise. The rider uses the reins to move the shoulders, not the legs. The rider only uses the legs to cue the horse forward as needed, not to activate an outside hind leg or inside hind leg.
  4. I like to start the counter bend exercises at a SLOW walk until I am organized with my aids in timing with my horse’s shoulder steps and that my horse understands the concept of the exercise before we progress to more tempo at a walk or smooth gait.
  5. Counter Bend Applications: Counter bend neck rein turns can be applied on a serpentine by changing the counter bend at each turn, on a figure eight and changing the counter bend in the center, on a square by applying a counter bend neck rein turn at each corner, on a circle by maintaining a counter bend, or a random counter bend turn any time I feel the need to rebalance and straighten the shoulders.

What a Counter Bend Turn is NOT

neck rein turn out of balance
This is NOT a counter bend neck rein turn. Crossing the outside foreleg over the inside foreleg throws the horse out of balance instead of moving the shoulders in balance.
The purpose of the counter bend neck rein turn is to move the horse in balance from the outside shoulder to the inside shoulder. This will help the naturally gaited horse find lightness in their smooth gait.

Counter bend on a circle at a fox trot in regular and slow motion.

Counter bend turns have helped my naturally gaited horses became lighter on the forehand, lighter in the bridle, more balanced in the shoulders. Then I began to re-introduce true bends, shoulder-in and shoulder-fore exercises as long as Lady remained light in the shoulders. I began to notice improvement in engagement and lifting her back to a neutral position.

Together the counter bend and true bend exercises have improved bit acceptance, balance, engagement from behind, activating the abdominal muscles to lift the back, and lifting the chest and shoulders, plus Lady’s naturally smooth fox trot is getting faster without breaking into a hard trot!

Counter bend neck rein turns have helped us find lightness and balance in the shoulders and now I can apply shoulder in and haunches in with greater balance and effectiveness!

More exercises for gaited horses to develop quality smooth gaits.


I hope this is helpful. Let me know your thoughts by sending a message.

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