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The TrotOnce a horse is walking the aids for the trot are the same as for the walk. To ask a horse to trot you squeeze gently with your lower legs. The pressure applied should be greater than that applied just to keep the horse walking forward and so may require a gentle kick with your heels. The trot is a "two step gait". This means that the horse moves its legs in pairs. It actually moves its legs in diagonal pairs, that is it lifts the left front (near fore) and right back (off hind) legs together and the right front (off fore) and left back (near hind) together. As with the walk you can feel the body sway from side to side as each hind leg is lifted and moved forward. Unlike the walk, the horse does not move its head forwards and backwards in the trot and so your hands can remain in the same position without restricting the horse's movement. The trot can be ridden in two ways: sitting and rising. Rising Trot, once learnt, is easier and more comfortable for both the horse and the rider. However, it can take a lesson or two to pick it up so don't expect to learn it straight away.
Rather than thinking of rising you should think of pushing your hips upwards and forwards in a gentle "thrusting" movement. The lower leg should remain in the same position throughout and so it is only the upper leg that moves allowing the hips to move upwards and forwards and then back down into the saddle. As soon as your seat is returned to the saddle it should be on its way up again in a continuous movement. It often helps to listen to the beat of the horse's hooves on the ground and count one-two-one-two in time to the beats to co-ordinate the corresponding sitting and rising. To ride on the "correct diagonal" the rider should sit as the inside hind leg hits the ground and rise as the outside hind leg hits the ground. However, this is usually something that is covered once the rider has mastered the rising trot and is covered in the Intermediate Riding Section.
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