How to Activate Your Horse's Hind Legs ⋆ How To Dressage (2024)

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When you read the comment, “Needs more activity” on your dressage sheet, what does that mean? Why is an active hind leg important in dressage, and how can you achieve that?

In this guide, we tell you everything you need to know about activating your horse’s hind legs!

Activity versus speed

First of all, it’s essential that you understand the difference between activity and speed.

Activity refers to energy, not speed. When the judge says that more activity is required, that means a more energetic hind leg is required, not a quicker tempo.

An active hind leg will flex at the joints and propel the horse forward through his back to the rider’s hand. When the rider uses a half-halt, the horse’s hind legs will come more underneath him, taking more weight and making the balance more uphill.

In a nutshell, an active hind leg helps to develop the horse’s engagement and, ultimately, collection.

If the rider asks the horse for activity without using the half-halt, seat, and rein aids to capture that energy, the horse simply goes faster, often losing his balance and falling onto his forehand as he does so.

Related Read:How to Ride Your Horse on the Bit

Rhythm

Before you can ask for more activity, the horse must be working in the correct rhythm.

Without rhythm, the horse will be unable to work forward through his back, so make sure that the rhythm of the pace is correct before you begin asking the horse to be more active.

Related Read:How to Get a Good Rhythm

Activity and engagement

Developing engagement is essential when training a dressage horse.

Engagement is all about the horse learning to carry more weight on his hindquarters, lifting his forehand, and improving his balance.

If the horse is not working actively from behind, he will not be using his hindquarters correctly. When that happens, the hind legs trail out behind the horse, rather than stepping underneath him and taking more of his weight and that of his rider.

When the horse is engaged, his hindquarters are connected through his back to the rest of his body, and that can’t happen if the hind legs are not activated.

Related Read:How Your Horse Should Use His Hindquarters

Working actively forward from the hind legs requires muscular strength on the horse’s part, which takes time and systematic schooling to develop.

Working forwards

It’s impossible for the horse to develop active hind legs if he is not working forward. So, you need to make the horse responsive and sharp to your forward aids.

One very effective way to do that is by using transitions.

  • Ride lots of upward transitions and downward transitions from one gait to another and within the paces.
  • Aim to ride one transition on each short side of the arena and at least two transitions on each long side.
  • Once you have the horse listening to your aids, ride transitions around a 20-meter circle to encourage the horse to “sit” on his inside hind leg, and step more underneath his body.

Related Read:How to Get Your Horse In Front of the Leg

Activity and straightness

Straightness is crucial when working on activating your horse’s hind legs. If the horse is crooked, the energy that you create cannot flow through his body.

So, when working on a circle, remember to use your outside leg and rein to prevent the horse from falling out through his shoulder or pushing his quarters out.

When you’re working on straight lines, ride the horse in a slight shoulder-fore position to keep control of the quarters and make the horse straight.

Also, make sure that you are sitting straight too. If you’re twisting your shoulders or leaning to one side, the horse may throw a shoulder out or bring his quarters to the inside to compensate.

Related Reads:

  • The Scales of Training: Scale 5 – Straightness
  • How to Keep Your Horse Straight

Let your horse use his back

Many riders accidentally block the precious activity that they’re trying so hard to create by not allowing the horse to use his back properly.

Ride in rising trot, sit lightly in the saddle, and be careful not to grip the horse with your thighs; all those things can block the activity.

Also, be very careful that you don’t lean forward over the horse’s withers or shoulders, as that will unbalance the horse and destroy any activity that you’ve succeeded in creating.

Related Read: How to Follow Your Horse’s Movement

How to ask for more activity

To ask your horse for more activity in the hind legs, you need to use a simple leg aid. Tap your horse quickly with your heel, spur, or ankle while keeping the rest of your leg relaxed and still.

Once you get a reaction from the horse, stop the aid, and sit still. Resist the urge to constantly squeeze your horse with your legs or kick him repeatedly, or he will quickly become dead to the aids.

To discover the most effective tapping aid takes practice, as each horse responds slightly differently. For example, you may find that a light tap with your schooling whip to back up your leg aids works well.

However, without exception, it’s the correct timing of the aids that are most important, rather than the strength. As you use the activating leg aids, you must also use a half-halt or “waiting” rein aid so that the horse doesn’t speed up.

As soon as you’ve used the activating aid, ease your rein to allow the energy to come through the horse’s back from behind and the hind legs to step further underneath the horse.

In conclusion

Rhythm and straightness are essential before you can begin to activate your horse’s hind legs.

Until the horse has an active hind leg, you will not be able to encourage him to work forward through his back to an uphill balance and onward to true collection.

Transitions are the key to developing more activity when used with a light, tapping leg aid, and well-timed half-halt as described above. Did that technique work for you? Let us knowin the comments section below.

Related Reads:

  • How to Improve Your Dressage Position
  • How to Create Energy in the Dressage Horse
  • How to Build Relaxed Power in the Dressage Horse
  • How to Encourage Your Horse to Work More Forwards, But Not Faster

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How to Activate Your Horse's Hind Legs ⋆ How To Dressage (2024)

FAQs

How to Activate Your Horse's Hind Legs ⋆ How To Dressage? ›

Aim to ride one transition on each short side of the arena and at least two transitions on each long side. Once you have the horse listening to your aids, ride transitions around a 20-meter circle to encourage the horse to “sit” on his inside hind leg, and step more underneath his body.

How do I get my horse to go on its hind legs? ›

The first step is to bring the inside hind leg more under the body. Enlarging the circle, shoulder-fore, or shoulder-in are excellent tools for this. The next step is to flex this hind leg by riding a turn, corner, volte, or a turn on the haunches. Half halts and down transitions work as well.

How do I get my horse to dressage? ›

Begin dressage training with light contact, using the lightest possible touch on the reins to guide your horse. Ride with a slightly loose rein and a light hand. As your horse progresses, gradually take up more contact. It's important for the rider to have an independent seat and hand so that the contact remains light.

How do I get my horse to engage hind end? ›

So if you nudge him behind the girth with your left leg, his left hind should cross under his body in front of the right leg. Do this in both directions, and feel how your leg influences your horse's hindquarters--how it moves away from your leg. Then introduce leg yielding.

What exercises strengthen the hind end of a horse? ›

Walk, trot, and canter poles all work different areas of the horse but have one thing in common: they help to strengthen the hind end and improve the way of going by working the entire topline and helping the horse to engage his core and lift his shoulders.

How do you pole exercise a horse to engage hindquarters? ›

Raised Poles

Raising the poles for pole work exercises is a great way to engage the horse's hindquarters. Lay out a row of six poles in a line, each one stride apart. Start by walking your horse over the poles, and then go over them in trot – you may need to amend the distance between them for this.

How do you tell if a horse is working from behind? ›

Take a look at the horse's back behind the saddle. There are muscles on either side of the spine. If the back is "swinging," and there is a good forward movement (impulsion), you should be able to see the muscles bulging on both sides of the spine.

Why can't my horse roll all the way over? ›

A horse that just has a little back pain may well find itself lying down and rubbing a little on one side. But will rarely roll all the way around. However, it can also be due to the fact that it is overweight - or that it has a particularly high withers.

What makes a horse good for dressage? ›

A good dressage horse should possess strong front leg movement that produces a good length of stride, a powerful hind leg action that allows for top collection abilities, as well as a natural swing in their gaits (walk, trot, canter, gallop).

How long does it take a horse to learn dressage? ›

Consider that most horses at the Olympics or World Equestrian Games are around 12-14 or so, and they probably started being ridden at around 3 under the world's best riders and trainers. That means it takes roughly ten years to school a dressage horse to the top levels, even for the most talented horses and riders.

Is dressage hard on a horse? ›

This is very physically demanding for the horse and thus takes years of careful athletic training and systematic development. Secondly, the horse has to be taught to work within a specific set of boundaries. He has to learn to accept pressure and that is something that many horses find mentally challenging.

Why won't my horse pick up his hind legs? ›

The primary reasons why a horse will not allow its limb to be held up include lack of training, the handlers lack of skill (horsemanship), poor handling of the limb and the horse by the farrier, pain in the lifted limb, or pain in the weight bearing limb.

Why is my horse's hind leg turned out? ›

Horses may do this as a consequence of their conformation, weakness or lameness. If they are reluctant to flex the hind limb, then the only way to advance it may be to swing it outward. For some horses, this may be their "normal way of going" and they may perform fine while moving this way.

What is hind end weakness in equine? ›

The most common reason that a horse is weak on one hind limb is neurologic dysfunction in that limb, or spinal cord compression. Pain and chronic lameness can result in this observation as well.

Why won't my horse pick up his hind leg? ›

The primary reasons why a horse will not allow its limb to be held up include lack of training, the handlers lack of skill (horsemanship), poor handling of the limb and the horse by the farrier, pain in the lifted limb, or pain in the weight bearing limb.

Why won't my horse lift his back leg? ›

There are several possible reasons why a horse may resist raising, lifting, or bending a limb. This is most common in hind limbs but happens with front limbs as well. When an injured joint is put into flexion or any injured tissue is stressed, pain can result causing a horse to withdraw or resist.

Why is my horses back legs not working? ›

Paralysis of a hind leg is usually associated with injury to the nerve roots in the lower back or tailbone, or the femoral, sciatic, peroneal, or tibial nerve in the leg.

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