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  • Gaited Articles
    • What is a Gaited Horse?
    • ​Mistakes With Gaited Horses
    • ​Naturally Gaited - What Does This Really Mean?
    • Breeds of Trotting Horses That Can Gait
    • The Gaits - Description and How To Ride It
    • The Flat Walk
    • How To Help Your Horse Gait
    • Stifle Issues with the Gaited Horse
    • Stifle Rehab
    • Western Riders and Gaited Horses Don't Always Go Well
    • 5 Rookie Mistakes With Gaited Horses
    • What is Gaited Horsemanship?
    • ​3 Basic Riding Positions To Help Your Gaited Horse Gait
    • How To Use Your Seat
    • What Does Feel Mean In The Gaited Horse
    • ​What Does Timing Mean in a Gaited Horse?
    • ​Teach Your Gaited Horse To Give To The Bit and Be Soft
    • Teach Your Gaited Horse to Be Supple
    • Did You Know You Need To Condition Your Horse to Gait?
    • ​Work Up The Trippy Gaited Horse
    • Don't Sacrifice Gait for Speed
    • Bits
    • Two Hands or One
    • Half Halt Helps You Gait
    • Rein Contact with The Gaited Horse
    • Do You Know How To Use Your Reins
    • What Frame for What Gait?
    • Why I Teach My Gaited Horses The One Rein Stop
    • Arena Routine
    • Maneuvers To Help You on the Trail
    • Lateral Movements Part 1
    • Lateral Movements Part 2
    • Parking Out
    • Multiple Riders and Gaited Horses
    • The Most Misunderstood Horse - The Tennessee Walking Horse
    • Different Types Of Tennessee Walking Horses - Heritage vs WGC
    • ​Is My Tennessee Walker Sleep Walking?
    • ​My Tennessee Walker Slides On Trail
    • Why Your Vet and Friends, Think Your Tennessee Walking Horse is Neurologic
    • Why I Use a Dressage Whip
    • How To Use Spurs
    • Anxious Gaited Horse
    • Do You and Your Gaited Horse Need a Trainer?
    • ​Which Gait Is Your Horse Doing?
    • ​What Does A Camel Walk Mean In The Gaited Horse?
    • What Breed is My Favorite Gaited Breed?
    • ​Can Gaited Horses Buck and Rear?
    • The Good and Bad about Gaited Horses
    • How to Gait
    • ​How Hills Affect Your Gaited Horse
    • ​Different Terrains Can Affect How Your Horse Gaits
    • ​Does Your Horse Gait Better On Trail vs The Arena?
    • ​10 Ways to Fix The Trotty Gaited Horse
    • Why I Love The Pace
    • ​Teach Your Pacey Horse To Trot
    • Steps To Fixing Pace Part 1
    • Steps To Fixing Pace Part 2
    • Cure The Pace
    • 8 Ways to Fix the Pacing Horse
    • Step Pace vs Saddle Gait (Slow Rack)
    • Running Walk vs Rack
    • Step Pace vs Fox Trot
    • Cantering
    • Shoeing
    • Traction for Horseshoes
    • Tripping
    • Action Devices
    • Educate Your Veterinarian About Gaited Horses
    • Is Your Horse Gaited or Neurologic?
    • EPM
    • Wobbler Disease
  • Training Articles
    • Build Trust Not Fear
    • ​Why You Should Not Spoil Your Horse
    • Food is Not Love
    • 10 Ways to avoid horse accicents
    • To Desensitize or To Sensitize
    • Instincts
    • Look in the Mirror
    • Pay Attention
    • Success in Riding
    • Trail Riding Stables
    • Tighten your Girth
    • Defensive Riding
    • How to Tell the Age of a Horse
    • How Horses See
    • Blinkers
    • To Lead Or To Follow
    • Horse Behavior
    • Mare Vs. Gelding
    • Adjusting to a New Home
    • Bikes and Horses
    • Good Horse Gone Bad
    • Making a Good Trail Horse
    • How to Improve Your Trail Horse
    • Horse and Cows
    • Riding with Cows and Bulls
    • Gullys
    • Water
    • What to look for when buying trail horse
    • Vet Checks on Older Horses
    • Buying a Horse
  • Kentucky Mountain Horse
  • Missouri Fox Trotter
  • Rocky Mountain Horse
  • Tennessee Walking Horse
  • Standardbreds
  • Location - Gaited Pleasure Horse Ranch - Royal Oaks
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MAJESTIC RIDER
​Lateral Movements Can Help Get Your Horse to Gait and Stay in Gait - Part 1 
The Circle and Leg Yield
By Gaye DeRusso
 
Lateral movements are movements where you push your horse sideways. By doing so, it can help you go from a 2-beat gait, such as a trot or pace to a 4-beat gait. It also helps your horse to become more maneuverable and safer to control. 
 
The Circle 
 
Circles are helpful if trying to separate your horse's legs, get it to reach underneath itself more to increase stride length, become more flexible and listen to the rider's aids. It is very helpful for pacey horses. Start with a smaller circle about 10 meters in size.
 
 Look around the circle and try to trace an imaginary line with your eyes to follow. If you're not good at imagination, then try putting cones in a circle pattern and ride around the outside of the cones to give you guidance. Let's start by going in a circle to the left. Your inside rein (toward the inside of the circle) will be your left rein. You are going to pull and release on this rein to get your horse to bend and follow the circle. Every time you pull on the rein, dig slightly with your inside leg (left leg) at the girth, if the horse leans on your leg, it's helpful to wear a spur. They will not lean on a spur. By coordinating your hand with your leg, it will tell your horse that when you pull on that rein, you want the horse to give with his body and bend around your leg. 
 
This will make your horse more balanced in time. With your outside rein (right rein), you will give support to guide the outside of the horse's body (right side). If the horse is cutting in on the circle open the outside rein and apply pressure, to help guide the horse out. If the horse is drifting out (to the right) then close the rein against the horse's neck to block the horse from drifting. With your outside leg (right leg), keep it right behind the girth and if the horse drifts out, apply pressure to block the horse from drifting and to control the hindquarters. 
 
If you need to block the horse from drifting, remember to lighten your inside leg, so your horse understands which leg to move away from. Make circles 2-3 times in one direction, then reverse and repeat in other direction. Remember this is good for pacey horses to do at a walk but also in gait. For trotty horses this is good to do at a walk, but if you try to gait and they are getting trotty, I raise their head and sit in more of a chair seat, but if they are still trotty  then do not gait in a circle and only do the circle at a walk. 
 
Leg Yield 
 
This is a movement that requires your horse to move forward and sideways at the same time.  The horse will be slightly bent away from the direction he is going. So, if you are pushing your horse off your left leg over to the right, the horse will be looking slightly to the left as you do the movement. 
 
Teaching him to move sideways in a leg yield will help improve his suppleness, straightness, and acceptance of the rider's aids. It is helpful if your horse gets distracted on the trail to give him a job to do or if you need to move him over to get out of the way of a hiker or biker. It is very helpful at separating the horse's legs and getting a pacey horse to gait. 
 
Do this in an arena or a wide road when teaching the horse. In the arena walk down the quarter line (halfway between the middle of the arena and the rail). Let's say we are walking to the left. Turn left down the quarter line, the first time you do this just walk a straight line to the other end of the arena. You will be surprised how many horses cannot walk a straight line. Repeat until your horse can walk a straight line to the other end of the arena. Use your legs and reins to keep him straight.
 
Once he can walk a straight line again turn down the quarter line to the left. Once the horse is straight, press your left rein (inside rein) against your horse's neck, pulling slightly toward your right hip, but do not cross your rein over the neck. With your right rein (outside rein), open it to the side in the direction you are trying to go (that is to the right). The reins are guiding the horse. 
 
With your legs, bring your left leg (inside leg) slightly behind the girth and press until your horse takes a step sideways to the right. If as you press with your leg, your horse tries to speed up, pull on your reins and block the forward motion, so the only opening for your horse is to the right. 
 
Once he takes a step sideways, then take the left leg off and apply the right leg to block the horse from moving over anymore. At the same time bring your reins back to center. So basically, you are asking the horse to take a step sideways while walking and then you ask them to go straight for a step. Then you repeat and ask for another step sideways and another step straight. As your horse figures this out, in time he will move sideways then straight and understand to keep doing this till he gets back to the rail of the arena or the other side of the road. Once your horse has the idea in one direction then repeat the other way. I usually do this anywhere from 2-4 times around the arena. 
 
With the pacey horse I will do this at the walk and their gait. As it helps to separate a pacey horse's legs. I like to keep the pacey horse's head lower and neck and back, relaxed and round as I do this to help with their gait. 
 
For the trotty horse, I will do this at the walk and if I go to gait and he starts getting trotty, I will raise his head and sit more in a chair seat to help him hold his gait, but if he is still having issues staying in gait and doing the leg yield, then I will do it just at a walk, until he can hold his gait better. 
 
 
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  • Home
  • Colorado Clinic
  • About Gaye Derusso
  • Donations To Help Support My Sites
  • Deposits for Sale Horses
  • Need Help Selling Your Horse?
  • Mangalarga Marchador For Sale
  • Liability Waiver
  • Ways to Learn With Gaye
  • Prepurchase Evaluations
  • Lessons On Site
  • Online Lessons
  • Lessons at Your Facility
  • Training for Your Horse
  • Consultations
  • Clinics
  • Camp Majestic Rider
  • Free Training
  • Blog
  • Gaited Training Videos for Sale
  • Gaited Horse Questions and Answers
  • Gaited Articles
    • What is a Gaited Horse?
    • ​Mistakes With Gaited Horses
    • ​Naturally Gaited - What Does This Really Mean?
    • Breeds of Trotting Horses That Can Gait
    • The Gaits - Description and How To Ride It
    • The Flat Walk
    • How To Help Your Horse Gait
    • Stifle Issues with the Gaited Horse
    • Stifle Rehab
    • Western Riders and Gaited Horses Don't Always Go Well
    • 5 Rookie Mistakes With Gaited Horses
    • What is Gaited Horsemanship?
    • ​3 Basic Riding Positions To Help Your Gaited Horse Gait
    • How To Use Your Seat
    • What Does Feel Mean In The Gaited Horse
    • ​What Does Timing Mean in a Gaited Horse?
    • ​Teach Your Gaited Horse To Give To The Bit and Be Soft
    • Teach Your Gaited Horse to Be Supple
    • Did You Know You Need To Condition Your Horse to Gait?
    • ​Work Up The Trippy Gaited Horse
    • Don't Sacrifice Gait for Speed
    • Bits
    • Two Hands or One
    • Half Halt Helps You Gait
    • Rein Contact with The Gaited Horse
    • Do You Know How To Use Your Reins
    • What Frame for What Gait?
    • Why I Teach My Gaited Horses The One Rein Stop
    • Arena Routine
    • Maneuvers To Help You on the Trail
    • Lateral Movements Part 1
    • Lateral Movements Part 2
    • Parking Out
    • Multiple Riders and Gaited Horses
    • The Most Misunderstood Horse - The Tennessee Walking Horse
    • Different Types Of Tennessee Walking Horses - Heritage vs WGC
    • ​Is My Tennessee Walker Sleep Walking?
    • ​My Tennessee Walker Slides On Trail
    • Why Your Vet and Friends, Think Your Tennessee Walking Horse is Neurologic
    • Why I Use a Dressage Whip
    • How To Use Spurs
    • Anxious Gaited Horse
    • Do You and Your Gaited Horse Need a Trainer?
    • ​Which Gait Is Your Horse Doing?
    • ​What Does A Camel Walk Mean In The Gaited Horse?
    • What Breed is My Favorite Gaited Breed?
    • ​Can Gaited Horses Buck and Rear?
    • The Good and Bad about Gaited Horses
    • How to Gait
    • ​How Hills Affect Your Gaited Horse
    • ​Different Terrains Can Affect How Your Horse Gaits
    • ​Does Your Horse Gait Better On Trail vs The Arena?
    • ​10 Ways to Fix The Trotty Gaited Horse
    • Why I Love The Pace
    • ​Teach Your Pacey Horse To Trot
    • Steps To Fixing Pace Part 1
    • Steps To Fixing Pace Part 2
    • Cure The Pace
    • 8 Ways to Fix the Pacing Horse
    • Step Pace vs Saddle Gait (Slow Rack)
    • Running Walk vs Rack
    • Step Pace vs Fox Trot
    • Cantering
    • Shoeing
    • Traction for Horseshoes
    • Tripping
    • Action Devices
    • Educate Your Veterinarian About Gaited Horses
    • Is Your Horse Gaited or Neurologic?
    • EPM
    • Wobbler Disease
  • Training Articles
    • Build Trust Not Fear
    • ​Why You Should Not Spoil Your Horse
    • Food is Not Love
    • 10 Ways to avoid horse accicents
    • To Desensitize or To Sensitize
    • Instincts
    • Look in the Mirror
    • Pay Attention
    • Success in Riding
    • Trail Riding Stables
    • Tighten your Girth
    • Defensive Riding
    • How to Tell the Age of a Horse
    • How Horses See
    • Blinkers
    • To Lead Or To Follow
    • Horse Behavior
    • Mare Vs. Gelding
    • Adjusting to a New Home
    • Bikes and Horses
    • Good Horse Gone Bad
    • Making a Good Trail Horse
    • How to Improve Your Trail Horse
    • Horse and Cows
    • Riding with Cows and Bulls
    • Gullys
    • Water
    • What to look for when buying trail horse
    • Vet Checks on Older Horses
    • Buying a Horse
  • Kentucky Mountain Horse
  • Missouri Fox Trotter
  • Rocky Mountain Horse
  • Tennessee Walking Horse
  • Standardbreds
  • Location - Gaited Pleasure Horse Ranch - Royal Oaks
  • Contact
  • Testimonials