Skip to main content

Books

Submit Request Quote
 * Denotes Required Field.
Name:
 *
Company Name:
Phone:
Email:
 *
Message:
Request Quote
 
Out Of Stock image

Is currently out of stock, however if you enter your email address we will notify you when it comes back into stock!

The Bit and the Reins: Developing Good Contact and Sensitive Hands by Gerhard Kapitzke

The Bit and the Reins: Developing Good Contact and Sensitive Hands by Gerhard Kapitzke

Model Number: 9780851319032

£18.95 GBP
Some wear to the jacket. Horsemanship can find expression in many forms, from the dressage arena to the mountain trail. Regardless of riding discipline, a physical and psychological harmony between horse and rider is what is most important. This harmony can only be fully realized if a means of communication between partners is established, a need which has led to the development, over time, of bridles, bits and reins. Despite generations of horseback, many riders still see bits and bridles as a means of coercion, rather than lines to facilitate communication. In this book, renowned horseman Gerhard Kapitzke clarifies the important role of these frequently misused items of tack, illustrating the horse's natural movement and how a rider can seek to develop an independent seat and allow the evolution of a common balance, rather than forcing a particular head carriage. The author provides a basic training outline that ensures the young horse has time to build musculature, understanding, and the desire to communicated with his rider before he is asked to respond to a complex bride and intricate rein aids. The rider's ability to fulfil his role as partner is also addressed, and Kapitzke explains now only how to properly choose and adjust tack, but also how to cue for half-halfs and hold the reins of a double bridle in various ways. Perhaps most valuable are the accurate descriptions and illustrations of various types of bits and their adjustments and corresponding effects. Kapitzke acknowledges that, in order for a rider to be sensitive enough to 'hear' what the horse is telling him, he needs to have a thorough understanding of the action of the bridle and bit he is using. Every trainer who desires a harmonious relationship with his mount, in competition or recreation, will value the honest dialogue that will commence with a comfortable, happy horse and unhindered lines of communication. Then, the author writes, the act of riding will become 'a conversation between two friends'

Hardback.
Quantity: