|
|
Regardless
of
your age or level of experience, my teaching style offers many
opportunities for you to find success with your horse. I have taught
seasoned competitors and recreational riders in both English and
Western disciplines. My particular focus has been in competitive hunt
seat riding but the body mechanics involved in communicating clearly to
the horse remain the same no matter what the discipline, a horse is
still a horse no matter what tack you choose to put on .
My
primary goal is to create unity between horse and rider because a happy
horse makes for a happy ride. If we can learn to ride in a manor
that
is comfortable for both the horse and the rider, the horse will not
only enjoy the process, but will also share in the joy that riding
brings to the rider.
Creating
the “Path of Least Resistance”
by offering clear clues to the horse
through the use of your body lessens the chance for miscommunication
and also increases the horse’s comfort and confidence.
Understanding
what your body is saying to your horse is very important in
understanding why your horse is doing things that you may not think you
are asking for.
My
lessons work to teach
the rider better body
control
and openness to communicating with the horse in order to create a
partnership. Building better communication through your hands, seat and
legs as well
as weight, breath and center is the foundation of my teaching
style.
Once a clear communication style has been developed then focusing on
the particulars of the discipline can be explored.
Years
of study with many great teachers on and off the horses have helped me
develop a style of teaching that creates an awareness in the rider that
opens the mind while relaxing the body to a state of conscience
awareness. I work to teach you how to create that “Path of Least
Resistance” - opening up the way to a great ride, an
effortless
unity created through clear, confidant communication. I strongly
believe
in the value of a safe, strong position through the proper use of legs,
hips and back. I have seen the trends in rider’s positions change
over the last 35 years, and I understand the negative impact that a bad
position can have on a rider over time.
I work
very hard to free the
tension and bad compensation habits that can or have developed
overtime. Your back health is of the utmost importance. The
better you use your back, the better your horse will use his.
Horse and rider working together to improve the use of the back will
enhance and improve the strength, which increases longevity, endurance
and overall health and comfort for both.
|
12970 Valley Circle, College Station,
Texas 77845
979-690-6206 •
Jacquimiller.nsec@gmail.com • 979-574-0884
|