
Longeing is a good warm-up technique, but we aren’t advocates of over-doing it. It can be tough on the horse’s joints, tendons and ligaments.
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There are many different opinions about how a horse should be warmed
up prior to exercise. Unfortunately, there is not much available in terms of
formal equine research to validate anyone’s opinion.
With flight as the horse’s major defense mechanism, he comes
endowed by nature with significant built-in athletic ability. However, what we
ask of our performance horses—particularly those in specialized disciplines such
as dressage, cutting, jumping and high-speed work—is much more than a horse in
the wild would ever do on a regular basis. A correct warm-up has the potential
to influence how well the horse performs.
The goals of a warm-up are:
• To prepare the horse mentally
• To prepare the horse physically
• To reduce the risk of injury.
Preparing the horse mentally depends heavily on the horse's
personality. An extremely excitable horse will benefit from being kept as far
away from the busiest areas at a competition, hopefully with a quiet companion.
Keep to a predictable routine and time schedule at competitions as much as
possible. For example, try to always arrive at the same time before your event,
always warm up X minutes before your event. Begin and end your warm-up with a
strong focus on getting the horse to drop his head and relax as much as
possible.
This type of horse also often benefits from being kept walking
before competition. Easily distracted horses also benefit from this type of
mental warm-up, while the horse that is disinterested or on the lazy side needs
the stimulation of having activity around him and a warm-up that is demanding
his attention every minute you are in the saddle.
| Conditioning |
| Warm-ups are important, but they can’t substitute for correct
conditioning. Regardless of the breed or sport, the basic conditioning program
is the same. A minimum of 200 miles of slow conditioning work should be invested
in correctly conditioning the horse to do work. Conditioning starts with
walking, progressing to trotting and gentle canter/lope, always with walking at
the beginning and end. The heart and cardiovascular system will be conditioned
first, followed by muscles, then joint/tendon/bone. This means the horse will
seem fit for the work long before his structural system has really finished
remodeling. If you avoid the temptation to begin faster or more specialized work
until the groundwork has been done, there will be far fewer problems with
injuries. When you do start more intense training, don’t forget those warm-ups!
They are as important at home as they are at competitions. |
How best to prepare the horse physically is where most of the
controversy lies. Some feel hard warm-ups take too much out of the horse, others
feel they improve performance. Again, good equine data is lacking, but there is
quite a lot of human athletic information out there we can try to use. There is
good agreement that stretching probably helps reduce soft-tissue (muscle,
tendon, ligament) injuries. You can’t ask your horse to stretch but you can make
sure you do five to 10 minutes of loose, relaxed walk at the beginning and end
of your warm-up.
Advocates of gentle warm-ups would have you only trot, maybe a
slow canter for short periods, between the two walking periods. However, several
human studies, looking at everything from children through conditioned athletes,
have found a more intense warm-up definitely improves performance in terms of
speed, strength, jumping ability. That’s basically everything except agility,
which has more to do with nervous-system function and reflexes conditioned by
training.
The equine equivalent would be anything that gets the horse’s
heart rate above 150 to 160—short bursts of speed or high intensity trotting.
Human coaches also recommend incorporating warm-up activities that are similar
to what will be involved in the show or competition.
Do some turns on the haunches or forehand, collected dressage
movements or pop a few jumps. The warm-up should be close enough to the
competition that the horse does not cool off completely. In addition to
loosening up the muscles and getting blood flowing, these warm-ups also prepare
the horse’s muscles biochemically to work.
All things being equal, warm-ups decrease the risk of injury. However, they
may need to be modified for horses with known problem areas. For example, if the
horse has hock issues, incorporate passive flexion by picking up the leg and
gently flexing 10 to 12 times before your warm-up and before your competition.
Keep the joint warm and flexible by use of liniments or Neoprene wraps. Reduce
or eliminate warm-up activities, like longeing, that will strain the
joint.