Horses naturally want to be balanced and stay upright. Unbalanced horses stumble, slow down or race around turns. If you can help your horse to be balanced through turns, he will be more sure-footed, confident, and able to perform better. Use the following tips to help keep your horse balanced through turns:

You must be straight and balanced – The biggest factor affecting any horse’s balance is the rider. Imagine running an obstacle course while carrying someone on your shoulders. It would be far easier if the person was centred and supple, than if they were crooked, tipping forward, backward or sideways. To help your horse maintain his balance through turns, start with finding your centre of balance over your horse, being supple and sitting tall with a straight line from your ear-shoulder-hip-heel. Keep your shoulders square with your hips, your weight even in your seat bones and the space between your hip and bottom rib even on both sides (no collapsing at the waist). If your horse is safe and quiet, warm-up at the walk without stirrups to find your balance and straightness. Turn down the centre line and close your eyes for a few steps as you walk a straight line. If your horse drifts, you are not sitting square or centred.

Keep your horse straight – Your horse is straight when his nose is aligned with the centre of his chest, his poll is in line with the top of his tail and his shoulders and hips are square to each other (i.e. his hind feet track directly behind his front feet). Use your legs to direct his hips, barrel and shoulders and your reins as boundaries that only tell his nose and neck where not to go. For example, you are riding a turn on the right rein when your horse falls into the turn. His left hip swings out; his right shoulder pushes in; and, his nose tips to the left. To straighten him:

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