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Why tölt downhill?
I am discussing this here, because
it is so common with american riders and gaited-traditions, to train gaits
uphill. But we must remember, Icelandics are not like for example
Tennessee walkers, that gait with a peculiar head-bobbing. The big
gaited breeds work more from the front end, pulling themselves forward,
but the Icelandic works from the behind, pushing it self forward, without
the head bobbing.
When training
tolt, both on 3, 4 and 5 gaiters, it is easier to tolt on a flat ground
or on a slight down-slope.
A 3-gaiter
(trotter) walks better under his behind going downhill, and has much difficulties
learning to tolt uphill.
A 4-gaiter
has also often more problems tolting uphill. And if you want to train
show-quality tolt, you get more speed and more action training the horse
going a bit downhill.
A 5-gaiter,
that is a bit pacy, learns to carry himself, free his withers, have more
action and strengthen his behind going downhill. A pig-pacer going
down a steep hill has to tolt or stumble, and will clean his gait.
A 5-gaiter will clean the beat going uphill, but he is not getting trained
in tolt, the cleaning of the gait is just happening because there is a
shorter distance to the ground for the front feet, the horse is not moving
in any different way.
I've tried,
as an experiment, to train pacy horses going uphill. The result is
that the horse cleans the gait while going uphill, but is still the same,
or worse, when going on flat surface or downhill (because the horse is
carrying itself sloppier, it learned that going uphill).
So, you can
do what you want, but it is easier, with all icey's, to use slight downhills
to train tolt. I am not telling you what to do, but this is easier.
The idea from other gaited breeds, to gait uphill, comes from the idea
that the horse is strengthening the behind while going uphill. You
can do that in trot, walk and canter. Gaiting uphill might work for
other breeds, I do not know about that.
Keep in mind,
though, that going downhill is straining for the frontlegs, so don't use
it
exessively, or use very steep
hills, exept if you have to.
History
I Characteristics I Colors
I Breeding goals I Gaits
I Training I Raising our
horses I Our broodmares I Foals
1999 I Foals 2000 I Onelist
I Location I Weather
I Winter gallery I Summer
gallery I Us at Langhus I Icelandic
cow I Icelandic sheep I Icelandic
sheepdog I Articles from the website IWebrings
I Link-collection I Horses
for sale I