
Okay, so you don’t have to be a ballerina to have fun with this. You can put the noodles at all kinds of crazy angles or make a grid to walk through.
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You’d rather be out on the trail or hauling your horse to some
fun riding event. Instead, you’re stuck riding in an arena. And merely going in
circles seems boring. One dictionary defines being bored as "tired of and
slightly annoyed by a person or situation that is not interesting, exciting, or
entertaining." Another dictionary says, "Tired and uninterested from being
unoccupied or under-occupied."
If you’ve ever been around a teenager who says she’s bored, you
know that she rummages around in the refrigerator, complaining that "we never
have anything good to eat around here." She whines at her little brother,
grumbles at the dog for making so much noise when he drinks water, and then she
finally flops down on the sofa to surf the TV channels. Of course, if her
boyfriend calls, she’ll be a different person, even though nothing will have
changed in the refrigerator, or with her brother or dog. The change will have
happened within her.
When we talk about busting the boredom of arena riding, we have
to first realize that we’re talking about changing our feelings. We have to find
a way to spark our interest even though the activities or environment may not
seem exciting. So the challenge is to find entertaining ways to do something
familiar or to add some variety to our everyday activities.
If riding is normally a work time, try changing your focus to
make this next ride fun. Many riders, especially those working toward a goal,
end up drilling when they ride, focused on finding faults in their riding or
their horse’s performance. Before long, riding becomes a chore. No wonder that
arena riding isn’t fun for them. (It likely isn’t fun for the horse, either.)
You can lighten up by interspersing serious training with five
minutes of "recess," playing with one of the activities we list below. Then both
you and your horse can go back to class refreshed.
On the other hand, if you normally think of riding as off-duty
time and you depend on the trail or riding companions to keep you interested,
this is your chance to realize how much fun working in an arena can be. You pick
a small task and then see how well you can do it. As you buckle down with a
specific objective for a few minutes, you become engrossed in what you’re doing.
Before long, you’ve been riding for an hour or two, and you haven’t been bored
for a minute.
Here are a few suggestions to help spice things up. Keep in
mind that every time you ride, you are training your horse. So think in terms of
quality riding, not just activity.
1. Pick a small goal and achieve it. How about stopping with your shoulders
aligned with a certain fence post? Easy to do at the walk, but how about at the
trot and canter? Now how about doing it with a beautiful stop, not just a crash
landing by the post?
2. Do something better, not faster. See if you can ask your horse to go from
the walk to trot smoothly, without him raising his head. Now how about
downshifting from trot to walk, instead of trot, pause, and then walk?
3. Use this time to improve your horse’s tolerance for "stuff"
around him. Try riding with
a fly whisk, for instance, and whisk him all over, front and back. Or tie a
towel to the end of a longe line and see if you can drag it from horseback. See
if you can pick up a foam "noodle" from someone and carry it around. Try picking
up a bottle of water from a fence post or barrel. Now try riding by and putting
it back on the barrel without breaking stride.
4. If you’re a get-on-and-go type of rider, work on teaching
your horse to stand still for mounting, and to stay still until you give him the
signal to walk. Maybe just
standing still whether it’s for mounting or not is a big enough goal. Be sure to
do it with a sense of humor, not as a taskmaster.
5. Cones, cones, and more cones. There are a zillion patterns you can set
up. Play games like "in and out the windows," trying to see how smoothly or
accurately you can ride. Ride around obstacles or barrels. See if you can ride
forward between two barrels, stop, and then back between them. How about walking
around makeshift articles, or through a maze of foam noodles? Be sure to tell
your horse "good job" and give him a soothing stroke when he does what you
want.
6. Try using different signals than you usually do. If you normally direct rein (riding with
a rein in each hand), try neck reining. If you normally neck rein, try using
weight or leg cues. If you use voice cues, try using your reins or leg cues. If
you usually use leg cues to ask your horse to sidepass, see if you can do it
with just rein cues. How about trying to ride circles using just one rein? Make
it play—not work—for your horse (and keep in mind that your goal is always to
try to use the lightest cue possible).
7. Ride with music. This one is really fun. You can try to match your horse’s stride to a
particular tune, or work up a dance routine to a favorite song. Pretend you and
your horse are preparing for a "gig."

Try not to let your horses have a discussion before you begin.
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There. That’s better.
Now we’re ready.
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Now the challenge is to ride without losing your end of the polo wrap,
especially when the horse’s strides don’t match.
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8. Ride with a loose rein. Put your horse into a perfect head
position and speed, and then drop the reins. See if he can maintain his
performance for a few strides without your reins.
9. Work on rhythm. Think big, relaxed steps. That means you have to focus on letting your
seat relax and move with the horse. You might even close your eyes (if it’s safe
to do that) or have someone lead your horse while you close your eyes. Shrug
your shoulders to see if you are holding yourself stiffly. Test yourself to see
if you can feel when each of the horse’s feet touches the
ground.
10. Play with a friend. It doesn’t have to be someone who rides
the same style as you do. Ride single file, keeping exactly the same two-horse
length between the horses. Then see if the lead horse can stop and stand still
while the other horse goes on past him. When you ask the stopped horse to walk,
don’t let him rush to catch up.
Ride side by side. Try to stay shoulder-to-shoulder or
stirrup-to-stirrup. Don’t get into a position where one horse could kick the
other. Work up to a goal like riding around with each of you holding one end of
a polo wrap.
When two riders get it down pat, invite a friend and turn
yourselves into a mini- drill team. You’ll have plenty of laughs and your horse
might look forward to the next arena session, too.
Having goals and breaking up the time with small achievements can be fun for
both you and your horse, and it helps to build that all-important sense of
teamwork. And that’s not boring.