
Using a scribe
during the test ride allows Janice to focus on the rider, while the scribe notes down Janice’s comments.
|
Have you ever watched riders work patterns at dressage shows,
reining competitions, or jumping events? Done well, the performances look
effortless. And while those patterns may seem like strictly a competitive
pursuit, guess what? Riding patterns offers each of us a way to improve how we
communicate with our horses—and how they respond to us—even if we never set hoof
in a show ring.
Lifelong horsewoman Janice Green has developed pattern riding
as a way to help her students stitch together an even closer bond with their
equine buddies. She is the owner of J Bar 4 Ranch in Watkins, Colorado, a
teaching, training, and boarding facility east of Denver. For more than 20
years, she has worked to give students and horses the tools they need to learn
and grow together.
Janice has always enjoyed creating and riding patterns, a trait
no doubt left over from her early days riding on drill teams. This extensive
experience also helped her realize what a great skill-builder pattern riding can
be.
Many of her students are highly motivated beginner-level to novice-level
adult riders. Janice wanted to cater to their needs. She envisioned a
progressive program that would help them set goals and feel good about their
accomplishments.
"While we all like going for trail rides, I’ve noticed that
when many riders head into the arena, they’re a bit lost," Janice says.
As she developed her program, Janice found it was easy to break
patterns down into fun, learnable segments. Starting with the basics, each new
pattern requires different skills that build on the previous one, so there’s
great potential for growth. Established patterns allow riders to practice on
their own; and knowing that they’ll be tested provides incentive to work through
the various elements.
"My students seem to find the most success when they work in a
system that’s both flexible and accountable," Janice explains.
Creating a Process
Janice’s program currently consists of seven levels. She starts
with simple patterns first, just walk/trot exercises, and builds from there.
"At the beginning, riders have so much to learn. They need to
learn to read the pattern, remember the pattern, and practice working the
elements of the pattern. This early skill-building is the cornerstone for
long-term, continued improvement," she explains.
Janice schedules once-a-month testing dates for anyone who
feels ready to be evaluated. She judges each rider using her own scoring system.
It is similar to the scoring system used in reining, trail, and dressage
competitions, but with her own priorities added to the mix.
"I use 70 as a base score, just like in reining and trail
competitions," Janice explains. "So each rider starts with a 70. Plus and minus
points accumulate throughout the ride and are then tallied into the score."
| Secrets of Learning and Memorizing Patterns |
| Don’t shy away from this unique and fun skill-building tool
because you think that memorizing patterns is too difficult. Remember the old
adage, "You’re only good at what you do a lot of." Just as we ask our horses to
learn by repetition, we need to do the same as riders. Janice Green offers these
hints to help you learn and memorize patterns:
• Redraw the pattern yourself. Take the drawing you made or
your instructor gave you and redraw it. Try to visualize you and your horse in
the arena performing the pattern as you draw.
• Color your drawing. Some riders use a different color for
each gait. The color association can help with reading a pattern and turning the
visual image into physical results. Color can help you remember what goes where
when you’re trying to visualize the sequence in your head or ride the pattern on
your horse.
• Write a sequence list. Turn the pattern into a list of
maneuvers. Some people can memorize a list even though they can’t memorize a
picture.
• Walk through the pattern. Leave your horse at the tie rail
and actually walk through the pattern yourself. You can trot where appropriate
and canter, as well. There’s something about the act of physically performing
the pattern yourself that helps lodge it in your brain.
• Ride the pattern with a caller. When you’re mounted, get a
riding buddy to talk you through the routine. For some people, hearing the
pattern described out loud helps lodge it in their brains.
Some of these ideas will work better for you than others. Try
one, try them all, and try them in different combinations. "Keep trying until
you find what works for you," Janice urges. "It is well worth
it!" |
To perform a pattern successfully, riders usually go through a
three-phase process which involves learning the pattern, eliminating mistakes,
and strategizing to earn extra points. Here’s what testing
entails:
1. Learning the pattern. The rider
must work the pattern in proper sequence. Going off course gives the rider a "0"
score.
2. Working to eliminate negative scores. Janice gives negative points for any pattern part that’s less than
perfect. These are things like a break of gait, a missed diagonal, the wrong
lead, excessive cueing, or poor execution of a maneuver. By reducing the number
of mistakes, the rider achieves a cleaner ride, fewer penalties, and a score
that hovers around that 70 starting point.
3. Strategizing to earn plus points.
Since scoring is a plus-and-minus affair, it’s important to emphasize the parts
of the pattern you and your horse do really well. The goal is to get an
above-average score. Remember, 70 is "average."
"To pass one pattern and move on to the next, a rider needs to
score 75 points and achieve a really flawless ride, with lightness of cues,
nicely maintained gaits, and everything forming a pretty picture," Janice
explains. "To meet these criteria, you need to perform some parts of each
pattern exceptionally well to get plus points."
For instance, say you’re able to perform a trot along the rail
with your feet out of the stirrups, maintaining a good solid seat while ensuring
that your horse doesn’t speed up. Then you reinsert your feet in the stirrups in
a smooth, easy gesture that gets no reaction from your horse. This would earn
you a +1 score for that sequence of the pattern.
But it’s not just about the score. Strategizing about the best
way to ride the pattern is a great teaching technique as well.
"The process allows riders to work on the quality of the parts
to achieve a polished whole," Janice confirms. Working through the process of
perfecting a pattern is a project unto itself. "Don’t be surprised if it takes
you months to be able to accomplish a solid, finished ride," she advises.
Skill Development
Janice’s program challenges riders to improve on a variety of
fronts, including such things as:
• Gait consistency. Maintaining a
gait without constant cueing is the basis of all pattern work. Riders learn to
achieve cadence and rhythm within the walk, trot, and canter, with the horse
maintaining each gait on his own until asked for a change.
• Gait transitions. Riders must
change gaits where indicated in the pattern. For example, if you’re supposed to
move from a jog to a lope in the center of the arena, you need to develop the
horse’s responsiveness to your cues to get the transitions at the designated
location. You also need to improve your feel and timing, giving the cues to
achieve this precision as you move up and down through gaits.
• Steering. Pattern work typically
involves riding in circles, boxes, serpentines, and the like, all of which need
to be a certain size and performed in a certain location. Sometimes, riders need
to match the size of two circles or the many bends in a serpentine, steering the
horse in such a way that he stays between your reins and your
legs.
• Negotiating obstacles. Some
patterns require you to negotiate obstacles—things like poles, cavalettis,
bridges, or other trail course elements. This can be a huge skill-builder. You
and your horse must develop trust in order to perform well over
obstacles.
• Communicating with different parts of the horse’s
body. You may be required to execute pivots,
sidesteps, and lateral work. An advanced pattern might even ask you to perform
counter-canters and lead changes. All of these maneuvers call for a high level
of understanding and mastery of how to make certain parts of your horse’s body
move.
• Equitation. To improve as a rider,
you need as much saddle time as you can get. Better equitation comes as you
learn to feel how the horse moves under you. You may need to post on the correct
diagonal or lope your horse in the correct lead, which requires that you learn
more about the mechanics of the trot and canter so you know if you’re doing
these steps correctly. Pattern riding can help you learn and practice skills
beyond the basics. As you develop a feel through your seat, you will develop
better hands—that is, slower and smoother cues that work with the horse, not
against him. Riding patterns leads you to feel the difference in your horse and
your own body as equitation starts to improve.
• Focus. Because you must think
ahead to the next segment of the pattern, you actually improve both mental and
physical focus by pattern riding. You must concentrate physically and mentally
on what you’re doing at the moment and remember what comes up next. Your horse
will understand and respond well to both of these improvements.
• Overall Communication. As you work
to achieve all that’s listed above, you can’t help but improve how you
communicate with your horse, using lighter cues and getting greater
responsiveness.

Riders warm up before testing begins. They’re running through their own patterns in their minds and working separate parts with their horses.
|
Test Day JittersTest day at J Bar 4 Ranch always elicits some jitters. Each
rider performs the pattern individually in front of Janice and any spectators
who may be there as the cheering squad. Testing gives everyone a chance to
experience that feeling of being in the show ring. Being able to work a pattern
undisturbed by this added pressure is another task to master—and great
preparation for anyone who wants to take their riding to the competitive show
ring.
At Janice’s barn, most of the spectators are fellow boarders
and lesson students. They provide great moral support for those riding on test
day. While the arena may be as still as a library during the performance, cheers
and calls of "good job" and "nice ride" afterward always make riders feel
positive and more confident, and build camaraderie.
After each test run, Janice completes a written score sheet,
which is a mini-lesson in itself. On one page, it gives the rider a numeric
score for each segment, an overall score, along with comments on what went well
and how to improve. Janice also reviews the score sheets one-on-one with riders,
while everything is still fresh in everyone’s mind.
"I write down comments for riders to keep and refer back to as
they practice," she says. That way, riders have a record of which skills they’ve
acquired, and suggestions for exercises and skills to work on to improve any
problem areas in the pattern.
Sharing the Program
You can implement pattern riding at your barn in a couple of
ways.
Instructors: If you’re an
instructor, you can use pattern riding as a short-term tool in lessons. Make up
a short pattern that includes skills you’ve been working on in class with your
students. Spend time at the beginning of a lesson working on the parts of the
pattern, so students can practice these skills. Then, have students work the
whole pattern two to three times during the lesson. Give them something specific
to improve upon during each run. The short-term goal is to see adjustments and
improvement every time the rider goes through the pattern.
Or you can take a long-term view of pattern riding, as Janice
has done. "The long-term goal is to build confident, responsive, bonded
horse-and-rider teams while having fun along the way," she says.
Start with one pattern, then add another, then another. Before
you know it, you’ll have your own long-term program going at your barn.
| Pattern Work = Better Performance, Fewer Problems |
| Do you need your horse to be more responsive to slow-down cues
on the trail? Do you need to improve your mare’s gait transitions to be more
competitive in the western pleasure show ring? Are you trying to despook a jumpy
horse? Take these goals and design patterns that highlight the weak links in
your horse’s training. Developing a pattern that you can practice over and over
will help you develop a better broke horse. Build a pattern that requires many
transitions from point to point, or put together a pattern with a variety of
scary obstacles that you must learn to negotiate together. You can even build
groundwork patterns to help work on confidence and control issues.
If you break down your patterns and work on them segment by
segment, your horse will show definite improvement. It’s what Janice calls
"purposeful riding." She urges everyone to "Have fun and go for it!"
For information on Janice Green’s skill-building patterns and how to judge
them, you can contact her at jbar4ranch@netecin.net. |
Be creative in designing your own patterns. Make a list of
skills you or your students are working on, or would like to work on. Put these
skills into maneuvers and then connect them.
Go to horse shows to get ideas on how to use the entire riding
space to create movement in your pattern. Your goal is to create a flow around
the arena.
"I advise keeping the patterns short to begin with," Janice
adds. This speeds up learning time and helps to increase pattern retention. "You
also can take a look at dressage tests—available in books or online—and modify
them to fit your needs."
Riders: If you train with an
instructor, work with her to develop a plan that focuses on the improvements you
want to make. (You might share this article with your trainer as a first
step.)
If you generally ride or train alone, enlist a friend to help
you with the evaluation portion of the program. Share the pattern and explain
it, then ask your cohort to evaluate you while you ride through it. Try to find
somebody who will be good at giving you constructive ideas and will congratulate
you for what you do well. Make sure your judge understands that this is a
skill-building tool for you and that you appreciate complete candor in
evaluating your ride.
The Value of Goals
The biggest benefit to pattern riding is that it gives you
goals to work toward. Having goals keeps you improving as a rider and benefits
your relationship with your horse.
As you break a pattern down and work on the separate parts of
it, think of mastering each piece as a separate goal. Ride each piece over and
over until that element is smooth and polished. Think of putting all the parts
back together again as another goal, and work on it so you can ride a beautiful
complete pattern. Then aim toward that next pattern. Approach the learning
process in small steps (as you do with your horse’s training), making sure you
master each step before moving on. Directed practice and repetition are key.
"The sense of satisfaction my students feel when they successfully complete a
pattern is great to see," says Janice. "They know that they’ve reached a goal to
improve their level of communication and understanding with their horses."