via GIPHY
Trust
It doesn't matter how straight your centerline is, or how square your halt is if you can't get your horse near the judge's booth. I've seen many "C- track left"'s turn into "between X and G- bolt left"'s. While you can never fully predict how a horse will react its first time experiencing something new and different, a little bit of work on building trust can help make the process much less stressful for everyone involved. Helix's favorite trust building exercise centers around the "touch" command where I point at an object that he might be a little unsure about and give him the command "touch." Upon successfully touching the "scary" object with his nose, he gets a cookie. We do this in hand as well as under saddle. The treat is not 100% necessary and can be replaced with a generous praising/petting for horses who get overly mouthy. The main objective is to demonstrate to the horse that you will never expose him/her to anything dangerous.
Here Helix demonstrates the "touch" command and learns that the plastic page protector is nothing to fear.
In addition to the "touch" command, hauling to new places, trail riding, and essentially providing positive experiences where they see new things will go a long way in creating a spook-free centerline.
Forward Energy
The easiest way to ride a straight line is to create and then utilize forward energy. To demonstrate this I'd like you to do a bit of an experiment. Go out to the wash stall and place the the hose on the ground. Now turn the hose on, but just barely, so the water pressure is very low. What does the stream look like? Probably a bit on the squiggly side, huh? Now turn the water pressure up, and voila! We have a straight stream. Your horse is very similar to the stream of water, but instead of turning a valve to create water pressure, you use your seat and leg to create forward energy. Crookedness averted! Your can practice using forward energy to generate straightness by riding straight lines off the rail. Quarter lines and long diagonals are great for testing straightness.
Preparation
In a training level test, the centerline is where the most abrupt changes is the horse's way of going take place. You go from trot to halt, halt to trot, and from a straight line to a square turn all over the course of 40 (or 60) meters. All too often we get to X and then think "Oh crap! I need to halt!" Or we get to C and think "Ahh!!! Must turn!" With how responsive and forgiving horses can be, it's easy to forget that their brains need a moment to process our request before they can actually do the thing we them to do! So a few strides before X, take a second to let your horse know that something is about to change. Ask for bend well before you get to C so your horse is ready to make a balanced turn when you get to C.
So there you have it. Instead of practicing centerlines until you're blue in the face, work on building trust, utilizing forward energy to generate straightness, and get in the mindset of prepare--->do. You'll be looking fine on centerline in no time!
Go riding!



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