
Concordia Fine Contact Dressage
£0.00
Concordia Fine Contact Dressage
20 x 40 Arena
Dressage classes for all those who want to compete with their equine partner according to holistic Concordia standards.
Please make sure that you read up on the Concordia rules which are adding additional criteria to standard dressage rules.
Please have a look at the available tests HERE and download the one you would like to practise for your video.
Once we have received your video and our professionals created their feedback with training and competition tips (to avoid unnecessary point deductions) you will hopefully impress your trainer in your next training session or the judges at your next dressage show. Your protocol will arrive via email.
If you want your score to be added to our “High Scores”, please keep in mind that this will not be free of charge, since we need to cover the cost for our rosettes and the postage. This fee is due only once for a level in a certain discipline. You can send us altogether 5 videos of the same test to better your original score 😎
You can decide right now during the checkout process or at any time later before the September 30 deadline.
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Description
Fine Contact Competitions have been born from the desire to find the most compassionate ways to care for, work, train and compete with our horses. They will reward correct training, lightness, partnership and trust, and are designed for those who seek the most respectful ways to communicate our requests, and for ridden horses, the most comfortable ways to carry us.
Level 1 = Walk & some trot
Level 2 = Walk & Trot
Fine Contact defines a subtle connection between horse and human. In ridden work it also describes the soft, stable, equal and elastic contact that the horse takes with the hand of the rider, taking account that the horse may be ridden with or without a bit. Such a contact allows the horse to work with a natural length of neck and the nose in front of the vertical. With horses in their early training, re-schooling or rehabilitation, this means that the posture is forward down and out, then as the horse gains balance and strength he very gradually learns to carry more weight on his hind legs by rounding and lifting his back and withers, so in the more advanced dressage competitions, as the horse shows greater collection, the neck is still long and the nose in front of the vertical.
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