Tuesday, January 21, 2014

The Leg Yield: According to Alois Podhajsky

I have made no secret in the past of my love for Alois Podhajsky (see also my review of Miracle of the White Stallions). His The Complete Training of the Horse and Rider is one of my training bibles, a book I return to on a regular basis when I'm thinking or seeking inspiration. So with my current emphasis on leg yielding, I went back to see what he had to say - and I was surprised! Here's what he writes:

As a preparation for lateral work the exercise known as yielding to the leg may be practised in order to make the horse undersatnd the effect of the rider's legs pushing sideways. But the importance of yielding to the leg must not be over-rated; it should be used only to teach the young horse to understand the rider's leg aids. Unfortunately in recent years the contrary is often the case when practising equitation. This auxiliary aid has taken too great a part in the German instruction for cavalry. The Spanish Riding School has always used this yielding to the leg only to a limited degree, recognizing its original purpose.
[he then describes how and why to teach the turn on the forehand, and concludes that it should never be asked for in a dressage test]
Yielding to the leg will be made easier for the horse by giving his head more position to the opposite side, that is to say, when yielding to the left, the position should be more to the right.
When the young horse has learned in this manner to answer to the pressure of the rider's leg by stepping to the side, the yielding to the leg should be practised only when in motion in order to consolidate the understanding of these aids. At the Spanish Riding School it is practised in the walk only and disapproved of at the trot. It seems illogical that the horse should be taught to go sideways and forward with exactly the opposite position to that which will later be demanded of him in the half pass.
 As soon as the young horse is obedient to the sideways pushing action of the rider's leg, the rider may start to practise correct lateral work.
Correct lateral work, to Podhajsky's mind, is the succession of shoulders in, travers, and renvers. He goes into great and loving detail about each of these exercises, how they work the horse's body, how they are to be ridden correctly, and what they do to benefit the horse in its progression toward the haute ecole movements.

On the one hand: Podhajsky always backs up his advice with good reasons, and when you think about it the shoulder in works many of the same muscle groupings and gets at the same things that a leg yield does.

On the other hand: Podhajsky's goal in this book is to build a horse in the correct classical dressage way, and the leg yield is not a classical dressage movement. He's referring to a broader body of work, and his method is half scholarly erudition and half military precision (he was, after all, a career cavalry officer until World War II). Training a horse is like painting a masterpiece, and extraneous brush strokes are not necessary.

So taking that into account, Podhajsky is working from the blank slate of an impeccably bred and well-started young horse. He doesn't (at least in this book) talk about working through physical deficits of an older horse, or a mis-trained one, or a less talented one. (He writes eloquently about those horses in My Horses, My Teachers, but that book is not the training manual that this one is.)

I think he has a point about moving on to the shoulder in, and I'll try and start working that in more. Mastering a corect shoulder in, and building the muscles to do so, will address many of the problems that we're working on with the leg yields: a more supple hind end, more controllable shoulders, keeping straight, and keeping rhythm through it all.

Does anyone have any other thoughts about leg yield vs shoulder in?

4 comments:

  1. My trainer is always hollering at me to "ride the shoulder!" I know all of our straightness, steering problems come directly from me losing his shoulder so practicing the shoulder in certainly seems beneficial.

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  2. Ok, I have no real opinion here (aside from the fact that I have been taught to teach horse lateral movements in hand before asking under saddle), but found two interesting links while thinking about/reading about the topic:

    http://www.meredithmanor.edu/features/articles/nancy/leg-yield-basics.asp
    http://thequestforequipoise.blogspot.ca/2011/12/leg-yield-vs-shoulder-in.html

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  3. I do think leg yield is useful...but Tuck and I could be the poster children for "too much leg yield = some pony is convinced when asked to half-pass that rider is doing it wrong." Ditto that for renvers, which is the single most useful lateral movement for our particular issues and which he took FOREVER to believe was possible for, I assume, very similar reasons.

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  4. Reading old posts!

    I struggled/struggle with the leg yield with my horse. Shoulder-in, meanwhile is easy. My trainer has always been careful to emphasize straightness in the leg yield, otherwise it becomes difficult for the horse to learn the half pass. While I can agree with Podhajsky in that the leg yield is really only a useful movement to illustrate a point in early training, I also think it's a great tool to create and maintain straightness in the horse. Yes?

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