The Leg Yield: Common Mistakes and Corrections
Free Groundwork Manners PDF https://bit.ly/4eXqeOp Free Patterns and Figures PDF https://bit.ly/4cCSp3o Free Flying Changes Webinar https://bit.ly/3zF81F6 Free Canter Course https://bit.ly/4cWNfzg Free Course on Confidence https://bit.ly/4eS5VBQ Free Rider Fitness PDF/Course https://bit.ly/4f16SYD Free Webinar on Rider Position https://bit.ly/3Ljoh1h Support me on Patreon: https://bit.ly/4bO7EVX Amelia's Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... The leg yield is a great exercise to work on suppleness and straightness of the horse. When first training a young or green horse, the leg simply means to go forward but as the horses’ training progresses and the aids become more sophisticated, the horse must also understand that the leg can mean to move sideways. How to introduce the leg yield: 1. Start by getting the horse straight on the quarter line or the centerline. 2. Ask the horse to flex to the inside. 3. Close the inside leg at the girth and keep the horse from over-bending or falling through the outside shoulder with the outside rein. Common mistakes: 1. Horse speeds up onto a diagonal line and does not cross the hind legs or stay parallel to the rail. Correction: use the outside rein to stop the horses outside shoulder and control the horse from running to the rail. 2. Horse takes over and runs forward in the leg-yield. Correction: make a walk transition and continue pushing the horse over. 3. Rider expects too much of the horse when first training the leg-yield. When the horse is first learning to leg-yield ask for just a few steps over and then go straight again. Be sure to praise the horse when they do the right thing. 4. Horse only moves over off of one leg but not the other leg. It is very common that the horse will move better off of one leg than the other. 5. Horse over-bends in the neck and falls through the outside shoulder. The rider can correct this by using the outside rein to. Prevent the horse from overbending in the neck. 6. Rider leans to the side to get the horse to move over: When the horse isn’t responding to the leg, often riders are tempted to lean over to the side to try to get the horse to move over. This does not work. If you find yourself leaning in the leg yield, make sure to make some sharp corrections with the leg and get the horse responsive. #Amelia Newcomb dressage #legyield #dressagetraining

Forward and in Front of the Leg

The Benefits of Walk Leg-Yields

Leg Yielding Made Easy

If Your Horse Nudges You With Their Nose, Here's What It Really Means…

The Trot Canter Transition: Common Mistakes and Fixes

How To Ride a Correct Leg Yield by Anna Ross-Davies | Jacksons Fencing

HOW TO LEG YIELD - TUTORIAL

6 "Normal" Things That Actually Stress Your Horse Out

The Aids - How to "Talk to your Horse"

Leg Yield Demystified

How to Keep Your Legs Still in Rising Trot? What causes them to move too much and how to fix it?

Ken McNabb: How to Teach Your Horse to Move Off Your Seat & Legs

Rider's Canter Position: Tips and Techniques for Improving Balance, Control, and Effectiveness

How To Teach The Piaffe: From Ground To Saddle

What the Comanche Understood About Horses That We Forgot

Travers and half-pass for beginners

How Not to Grip with your Legs in Canter

How To Fix Flying Changes with a Young Horse | Dressage Tutorial | Begijnhoeve | How to #13

How do You get the Horse on the Bit and Keep Your Hands Quiet?

