Tips, Training

Improve Your Riding Position – Using Pilates to Improve Your Riding Position

using Pilates to improve your riding position, horse riding, horse training, improve your riding position, exercises to improve your riding position, Laura Kelland-May, Thistle Ridge Stables, Thistle ridge Skill Builders, HOrse Training Ontario, Horse Training Ottawa
Using Pilates to Improve Your Position

Using Pilates to Improve Your Riding

You can use Pilates to improve your riding position. I’ve been riding since I was 12 years old and that was a long time ago! For first ten years or so, I danced at the same time. The dance teachers would beg me to give up horse back riding because it was interfering with my dancing. And the horse back riding teachers would plead with me to give up dancing because it was wrecking my riding. Eventually, I gave up dancing.

There was a period when I didn’t ride for about ten years as I didn’t have the time or the money. But I did return to my first love – horses and riding. Then I became a massage therapist and then a Pilates instructor. What a great marriage Pilates and riding is! That is how I know you can use Pilates to Improve Your riding position.

I danced, so I already had some body awareness or proprioception. One of the great things about Pilates is that it helped me to develop even more body awareness. Body awareness is knowing where various body parts are in space and what they’re doing. But this only comes about because the core is strong and stable. Once the core is strong and stable, my other body parts can be under my control.

What is Palites?

So what is Pilates, and how can you use Pilates to improve your riding position? According to Wikipedia, “Pilates is a body

using Pilates to improve your riding position, horse riding, horse training, improve your riding position, exercises to improve your riding position, Laura Kelland-May, Thistle Ridge Stables, Thistle ridge Skill Builders, HOrse Training Ontario, Horse Training Ottawa
Using Pilates to Improve Your Position

conditioning routine that helps to not only build flexibility, but also strength, endurance, and coordination in the legs, abdominals, arms and back.”

Strengthening Your Core for Riding

ilates is all about the “core”. In fact, lots of exercise professionals talk about the “core”. But what is the “core”? Generally speaking the core of the body is all the muscles of the torso without the head, the arms, or the legs. It does, however, include the butt muscles (gluteals). Some would even include the thigh muscles. But the important muscles of the core are deep inside where you can’t touch them and most people don’t know their names or even that they exist. The most important one being the transversus abdominis (TA) muscle. This muscle wraps around your midsection like a girdle. The reason that it’s important is that it must activate BEFORE you can move your legs in any direction to be effective and efficient in your movement. It’s the muscle that stabilizes your spine, ribcage, and pelvis so that your limbs have a solid base to move from.

using Pilates to improve your riding position, horse riding, horse training, improve your riding position, exercises to improve your riding position, Laura Kelland-May, Thistle Ridge Stables, Thistle ridge Skill Builders, HOrse Training Ontario, Horse Training Ottawa
Using Pilates To IMprove Your Position

Going back to how to use Pilates to improve your riding position – I can’t really answer the question very well because the dancing, the riding, and Pilates are all so integrated with each other and the deepening of the skills happened gradually over time. The only outside, objective evidence I have that Pilates has helped me as a rider is that my instructor is rather diabolical in what she has me do on the longe line. I accused her of making me do things that she didn’t make other people do. She readily agreed that she did do that. But she did it because she knew I could do it while others couldn’t. And I can do those things because of Pilates.

Here are some of the things she had me do:

• Legs out of the stirrups and arms out to the side.

 

• Twist facing my instructor AND open my legs out to the side in a split.

• At the trot!

Or these (at the trot of course!):

• With my arms straight out in front of me, I had to bring my knees up.

• With my arms out to the side, I had to bring my knees up.

• With my arms over my head, I tried to bring my knees up. I laughed because I couldn’t do that one! But I sure had to go find out why and work on it.

If you’re brave enough, you could ask your instructor to do that to you and see how successful you can be at those exercises.

And the reason I couldn’t bring my knees up with my arms over my head? Once I raised my arms that high, I had let go or opened up my core too far to be able to lift my knees.

How did Pilates help me do these things? Because my core is fairly strong and stable, I could stay centered in the saddle and use my torso, arms, and legs independently of my seat. And isn’t that what we’re all trying to perfect – an independent seat?

About the Author – Laurie Higgins

Laurie was trained and certified by STOTT PILATES® in both mat Pilates (2005) and Reformer (2010). She has been teaching mat Pilates since 2004 and is now teaching Reformer too.
Laurie can help you recover from injuries and improve your overall performance.

Laurie was trained as a Holistic Health Practitioner, certified by Healing Hands School of Massage, (Irvine, CA) with over 1,300 hours of training, and was certified by the Upledger Foundation in CranioSacral Therapy I and Equine CranioSacral Therapy, and by Ariel Hubbard, creator of High-Self Resonance Therapy (HSRT). She is a member of ABMP.

She also works on dogs, cats, horses and other animals in addition to teaching Pilates and Energywork. Laurie was certified by EQUESTRIAN PILATES® in 2005. Laurie has been riding horses since she was 12 years old, having ridden western, hunt, and dressage. She is now able to keep her horses at home while she deepens her dressage practice on Atticus, her Anglo-Hanoverian gelding, and Ollie, a thoroughbred rescue.
Because Laurie is both an active and life-long rider and certified in Pilates, she is well prepared to help you with your riding or other athletic endeavors through Pilates.