Jumping Horses - A Horse of Course Monthly Horse Column
If you ride jumpers and you want to be good, don't jump to any
conclusions.
Frederico Caprilli (1868 to 1907) had a few things to say about jumpers
and saddles and position.
Caprilli said to understand a jumping horse, watch a riderless horse
jumping. (That's very clever, and something a lot of riding
instructors should do, but apparently don't.)
That sly Italian said, "The principal lesson to be learned is
that the rider should be at pains to allow the horse to jump with his
natural movement. Sounds exactly like the fourth secret of perfect
horsemanship: give, let go, free the horse; in order to be victorious
in horsemanship, the rider must surrender.
Having watched a lot of riderless horses jump, Caprilli developed a
new theory, then a new rider position, and finally, a new saddle: The
Forward Seat. The forward seat changed the rider's position when
approaching a jump from straight up to a slight forward incline, but
"without exaggeration." And it left the rider slightly
inclined while the horse was landing, rather than at an exaggerated
incline backward as was the habit of the day.
Caprilli never said, "bend at the waist and throw your head and
shoulders down toward the horse's neck and off to the side."
This practitioner of his own new theory also said, "to signal to
the horse when he is to jump, as some people advocate, is extremely
difficult, and, even if perfectly timed, does as a rule more harm than
good...." In perfect horsemanship the rider asks--in the
case of a jumper by showing the horse what is to be jumped--and the
horse performs. Horse's perform best when the rider interferes
the least.
Caprilli said a capable jumper should not be interfered with, because
the good horse will "measure his obstacle" and will decide
on his own "the strength he needs to clear it without the rider
requiring to add any more." The mediocre jumper, Caprilli said,
can only be improved by rational and continuous practice and not through
the aids, or violent and sudden means." That's a little tough on
mankind's ego.
What Caprilli disapproved of most was the takeover of a good horse by
a rider.
"A horse schooled on my principles knows enough, when jumping,
to realize that he is about to need extra energy and therefore acts
accordingly. Any interference on the part of the rider can only
be harmful."
Caprilli was against "spot" jumping, and the attempts of a
rider to "put in" and extra stride, or "stretch out"
a stride.
The Italian didn't want his riders determining the point of takeoff,
he wanted the horse to make that determination. He said, "I
would like someone to quote a single case in which it would have been
better that the horse be less free."
Furthermore, he said, "If a horse's head is free he will look where
he puts his feet. Scatter a few stones on the landing side and
notice how cleverly he will avoid them."
Caprilli wrote it all down so wise riders could learn from the experience
of others. Funny, isn't it, Xenophon, a Greek, also wrote much
the same thing about 2,300 years earlier.
And today, the same ideas are being written again in a slightly different
way.
It is a wise man who learns from experience, and a wiser man still who
learns from the experience of others.
I don't know who said that. I just know while it was pretty clever
thing to say, unfortunately a lot of people aren't learning from it.
It seems they are jumping to the conclusion they can't learn a lot of
horsemanship from books. If that's true they are going to continue
crashing into a lot of jumps.
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