A Lateral Movement
Workbook: Shoulder-In with Volker Brommann
By Volker
Brommann
Volker Brommann shows you how to make your horse
stronger and more supple with shoulder-in, “the mother exercise of all lateral
work.”
In shoulder-in, you ride your horse at a constant
angle of approximately 30 degrees to the track with a slight but uniform
poll-to-tail bend around your inside leg.
He moves away from the direction in which he is
bent. Because of the bend and angle, his inside fore passes and crosses in
front of his outside fore and his inside hind steps forward under his body,
following his outside fore. If you were to stand in front of him, you would see
three tracks: inside fore; outside fore and, directly behind it, inside hind;
outside hind. You sit slightly more on your inside seat bone (less because you
reposition yourself than because your horse lowers his inside hip with each
step). You can feel that he’s giving you nice contact on the outside rein—just
enough that you can easily give on your inside rein and he doesn’t lose
balance, bend or angle.
In Germany we call shoulder-in “The mother exercise
of all lateral work.” For the first time in your horse’s training, he not only
has to accept your outside half-halting aids, bend around your inside aids and
stay supple in his poll, he has to travel rhythmically forward with his
haunches not aligned with, and following in the track of, his forehand. His
inside hind leg accepts more weight and his inside hip lowers, which allows his
forehand to lighten. Shoulder-in is a challenge, but once your horse masters
it, he’ll be stronger and more supple, and far more likely to find the other
lateral movements—travers (haunches-in), renvers (haunches-out) and
half-pass—fairly easy.
Shoulder-in Prerequisites
- A mastery of
leg-yield. Your horse completely understands and willingly responds to
your sideways- and forward-driving aids while staying straight through his
body.
- A degree of
collection. He moves forward on the bit with an energetic impulsion, his
neck somewhat raised and arched, and the whole structure of his haunches
(hip, stifle and hocks) well-engaged. His steps are a bit shorter than in
working trot, not because you are resisting or holding him with your
hand, but because your seat and legs are driving him forward into an
alternately “restraining” and allowing hand that encourages him to engage
and bring his hind legs farther underneath his body. However, if your
horse tends to get lazy or stuck, I don’t see any fault in occasionally
riding shoulder-in at more of a working trot, as long as he stays balanced
and supple and the trot doesn’t get so fast or forward that the movement
becomes choppy. In fact, I often purposely ride working trot to get more
cadence.
- The ability to do a
shoulder-fore. This is all about what we call “relative straightness.”
Left to his own devices, your horse will align his outside hind and
outside fore against the rail. But because his haunches are wider than his
shoulders, that brings his inside hind just a little more into the arena
than his inside fore so he’s relatively crooked. When you position his
inside shoulder in front of his inside hip, he’s straight because his inside
hind is following in the track of the inside fore.
- Throughness or
Dürchlassigkeit. There’s a free and easy flow of energy and aids from back
to front and from front to back as a result of his musculature being
connected, supple, elastic and unblocked.
- Self-carriage. He is
supple in his poll and appears to work almost on his own without relying
on you to hold him together. And this is important! If he’s not carrying
himself, shoulder-in—all lateral work, for that matter—can actually have a
negative effect on his training and development. When you ask him for
shoulder-in’s flexion, bend and angle, he’ll just lose his balance and
lean on your hands, become resistant or fall out over his outside
shoulder. For the best way to check that your horse is in self-carriage,
see Photos 1 and 2 at right.
- Balance on an 8- or
10-meter circle. On a light contact, your horse bends evenly from poll to
tail according to the circular track without any loss of tempo or
quality of movement.
Get Started
Training Tip: Use the bend and aids on an 8- or 10-meter circle. They are so closely related to the bend and aids in shoulder-in that they comfortably and logically set up your horse to begin the movement and help him restore those qualities if he gets into trouble during the movement.
Training Tip: Use the bend and aids on an 8- or 10-meter circle. They are so closely related to the bend and aids in shoulder-in that they comfortably and logically set up your horse to begin the movement and help him restore those qualities if he gets into trouble during the movement.
The 8- or
10-meter circles are so closely related to the bend and aids in shoulder-in
that they comfortably and logically set up your horse to begin the movement and
help him restore those qualities if he gets into trouble during the movement.
Photo by Tass
Jones
Come through the short end of the arena in
collected trot and in the corner, circle 8 or 10 meters. (If slowing things
down and walking helps you figure out the aids and your horse understand them,
by all means walk a few times.)
Anytime you feel your horse slow down or struggle
during shoulder-in, slightly relax your inside leg and circle to restore bend,
balance and impulsion. At the end of the long side, complete the shoulder-in by
again softening your inside bending leg aid and allowing your horse to bring
his shoulders back to the rail in front of his haunches. It is good schooling
to finish with a circle. It keeps you from cutting the corner and allows you to
realign your horse’s body for a correct corner.
Training Tip: Shoulder-in isn’t an end unto
itself—it is a gymnasticizing exercise intended to improve your horse’s
suppleness and balance. So ask for just a “baby” bend and angle at first and
only increase bend, angle and flexion in gradual, doable stages. Asking for too
much too soon will just have a negative effect. Your horse will lose his
balance or the quality of the trot, fall out over his outside shoulder or try
to hold himself up by leaning on your hands.
Once your horse is confidently performing a
shoulder-in this way, eliminate the circle but use the same aids to ask for
shoulder-in after coming through the corner. When that’s going well, try
shoulder-in on the centerline where you don’t have the support of the rail. As
long as you ride with mirrors or have a friend who can be eyes on the ground,
it is a great check on your aids and your horse’s response to ride shoulder-in
left, straighten for several strides, then ride shoulder-in right. See if you
can keep his haunches on the centerline and not swinging or falling through
your inside or outside aids. Make sure the exercise isn’t hectic, with you
flip-flopping three strides here, three strides there and your horse flinging
from side-to-side. It must be a very predictable, balanced, smooth change from
left flexion, bend and angle, to straight, to right flexion, bend and angle.
When you can do that and keep your horse’s haunches on the centerline, you can
be pretty sure that the two of you have mastered shoulder-in!
Training Tip: If your horse starts to get stuck and
dull to your aids, his muscles could be getting tired. Anytime you start to
feel that you’re working harder than you should to get results, give his
muscles a break. Change direction or do circles or serpentines. And don’t
forget that it is always a good idea to take a short walk break.
Instead of
continuing on a 10-meter circle, at the exact moment that his outside shoulder
leaves the rail, I add an even more active inside leg at the girth, which
pushes him forward and sideways down the track. My hips are parallel to his
hips, facing straight down the rail where his haunches should go. And my
shoulders are parallel to his shoulders, with my torso turned in just enough at
the waist that I’m looking on an angle into the arena. Even though my vision is
on a diagonal line, I’m checking where I am on the track out of the corner of
my left eye.
Photo by Tass
Jones
I don’t make
the mistake of collapsing—making the inside of my torso shorter and the outside
longer—in an effort to go sideways, or I’d actually end up pushing Asterios
outward over his left shoulder. Instead, I keep my torso erect. I also check
constantly that he’s bent, balanced and carrying himself. Anytime I feel him
losing the quality of the gait or pushing me to the outside, I’ll add a
stronger half-halt or more inside leg or flexion in the poll. If that doesn’t
work, a 10-meter circle should restore suppleness and rhythm. | Photo by Tass
Jones
Asterios
continues to be very active and forward on a very steady 30-degree, three-track
angle with a nice bend, but he’s become a bit low in the poll. To fix this, I
add more forward-driving aids with half-halts, and as a result …
Photo by Tass
Jones
… he comes
back up again. He’s just nicely enough on the outside rein that if I were to
release my inside rein, I’m sure he’d maintain this bend and angle. Knowing
that, I can start to ask for changes of tempo by going a little forward to a
more working trot, then smoothly coming back to a collected trot. This will
enhance the suppling, collecting effects of shoulder-in by making his inside
hind take even more weight and his inside hip come even lower. | Photo by Tass
Jones
Shoulder-in Problem Solving
- Check the photos below
for two of the most common problems—too much neck bend and too wide an
angle—along with trouble-shooting solutions for each. Other problems you
can encounter riding shoulder-in …
- Your horse follows his
shoulders and falls in off the rail. If he’s like most horses, he doesn’t
like to bend, or the idea is so new to him that he interprets your
shoulder-in aids as a request for him to turn. Correct him by riding
straight down the quarterline and leg-yielding to the rail. At the moment
you arrive, sit a little more on your inside seat bone and use your inside
leg at the girth to bend him as if for a shoulder-in. Do shoulder-in for
just a few strides down the rail and then straighten him and trot straight
ahead. Repeat the exercise a few more times and he should begin to
understand that he can do both: bring his shoulders in and leave his
haunches on the rail.
- Your horse loses
forward energy. Return to the more familiar bend of a 20-meter circle and
alternate collected trot with a more forward trot so your horse learns to
go forward on a curved line. Chances are, he’ll be better able to go
forward while staying bent and going sideways in shoulder-in. Or try an
exercise that I often teach. It not only restores a horse’s forward
thinking, it increases teamwork and agility. Come through the short side
on the right hand, say, and ride slightly forward on a shallow diagonal
line from M to A. When you arrive at the quarterline, apply the aids for
shoulder-in right and continue down the quarterline until you feel your
horse slowing down. Straighten, ride a few strides toward A again, then
reapply your aids for shoulder-in.
- Your horse rushes.
This is often because he doesn’t like to bend or go sideways. First make
sure that he’s strong and balanced enough to be doing shoulder-in. If so,
ride a 10- or 15-meter circle, using half-halts to control his tempo, and
then, with that control, go back into the shoulder-in, but with gentle, careful
aids and a slower tempo.
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