The Best Cavalletti Exercises for Walk, Trot, and Canter

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By Jec Aristotle Ballou

Your horse's three primary gaits-walk, trot, and canter-each provide distinct advantages for conditioning aimed at enhancing performance. When utilized effectively, these gaits can achieve outcomes that might otherwise be overlooked. Ideally, training sessions should incorporate equal time spent in each of the three primary gaits to promote both flexibility and strength. However, specific conditioning phases may require an emphasis on one gait over the others. This article will explore how each gait benefits the equine athlete, particularly in relation to back usage, and will highlight the role of cavalletti routines in training.

Many riders tend to focus excessively on one gait and tempo, most often the trot. While this approach can lead to increased strength, it often fails to enhance flexibility or effectively alter postural habits. Generally, work in the walk and canter is more effective for improving looseness and boosting flexibility in the hind joints, as well as engaging postural muscles.

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A horse that moves well must exhibit not only muscular tone but also harmony among its muscle chains. Limitations or weaknesses in one area can disrupt the entire system by affecting other parts of the body. Of particular importance is the balance between the extensor (topline) and flexor (bottom line) muscle chains. An imbalance—whether through overdevelopment or underdevelopment—can hinder a horse's potential for movement. Each gait contributes uniquely to achieving the optimal balance of effort, while cavalletti exercises provide a focused method for refining each gait during training.

The Walk

Any time a horse needs to un-learn a poor postural habit — crookedness, stiffness, hollowness — he should spend plenty of time training at the walk. This gait, especially when used in conjunction with cavalletti, allows for training the nervous system to adopt new habits without interference from the larger gymnastic muscles that take over during gaits with more impulsion.

At the walk, riders can re-wire new signals to sensory and motor nerves, increase range of joint mobility, and release restricted areas. When the nervous system is correctly wired for good posture and unrestricted motion, gaits with more impulsion can then have a more positive conditioning effect. As an example, horses with short scuffing trot strides should prioritize riding exercises and patterns at the walk. As these horses work with more flexion in their stifle and hock joints, their quadriceps and flexor muscles will begin to engage more, which in turn leads to better balance between topline and bottom line muscle chains and a looser swinging back with longer strides.

Related: Adjust Your Horse Stretches to Make Progress

Riders sometimes assume they are not getting enough done by schooling at the walk. On the contrary, walking creates looseness, and therefore movement. Without this, there can be no strength gains. Whenever poor posture or restricted movement exist, do yourself and your horse a favour and spend more time training at the walk. 

Here are three of the best cavalletti exercises at walk:

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The Trot

The best gait for improving overall cardiovascular and muscle conditioning, trot develops topline tone and function of the muscles that move the horse across the ground. During trot, a horse’s back serves as a balancing rod to support the diagonal action of his limbs, thus requiring that it be firm. This firmness can translate to needed strength for a horse with laxity in his musculature, but it can also unfortunately become the kind of strength that is accompanied by rigidity. When a horse is not confirmed — and relaxed — in correct body posture habits, these large muscles try to multitask. They attempt to do both the job of supporting posture and creating limb movement. Muscles cannot play dual roles like this; they become hard and tense. 

Related: Single Pole Exercises

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Photo: Pam MacKenzie

When a horse has an ingrained poor postural habit (crookedness, hollowness, over-flexion), too much trotting will only strengthen it. In this case, time is better spent using small amounts of trot for cardiovascular and circulatory wellbeing, but schooling with ample walking exercises to recruit better postural muscles before increasing strength in the gymnastic muscles. Cavalletti patterns, with poles spaced no further than his normal trot stride, ensure the horse organizes his body and rhythm as he develops the trot. The cavalletti will regulate his stride and assist him to move with precise height, length, and speed of stride. This allows his postural and gymnastic muscle systems to achieve harmony while strengthening.

Related: Building Stronger Horses

These three trot cavalletti exercises are useful for horses of all levels. The bending patterns encourage use of the horse’s oblique muscles, which stabilize the torso and lead to springy, expressive movement.

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The Canter

Learn to love the canter. This is a mantra I find myself using in clinics. Many riders atop horses that rush, or cross-fire, or give a rough ride at the canter, tend to leave the gait alone and assume that as other gaits improve, so too will the canter. But this plan often does not work. The walk and trot mechanics become stronger while the canter remains undeveloped, which is a shame when considering the physiological payoffs that come from cantering.

Even in the case of less-than-ideal canters, the physical benefits for the horse are huge. Cantering improves your horse’s body symmetry and musculature in ways the other two gaits cannot. Why? It creates unrivaled flexibility in the lumbosacral joint, an area prone to tension that affects a horse’s ability to round his topline. Greater flexion and looseness in the lumbosacral joint means the horse’s whole back can transmit energy from the hind legs, allowing the horse to engage further underneath his body. In walk and trot, there is only minimal movement in this region. At canter, both hind legs swing forward together, thereby rocking the pelvis. Moreover, in canter the forelimbs push the front end upwards to create a moment of suspension. This upward thrust causes a trampoline-like movement in his torso between his scapulae which can help free up areas of tight tissue. 

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Researchers measuring contractions of the long back muscles have found them to be fullest and strongest in the canter. Cantering is a vital tool, especially for horses with asymmetrical development or difficulties lifting their backs because of stiffness or a pattern of bracing. Cantering is also an asset for horses that “block” their backs or tighten up when asked to come on the bit. It is possible to educate muscles and build strength without cantering, but that strength will lack the agility and looseness through the spine that consistent canter workouts offer.

For best results when schooling canter, try the following exercises. A general rule is to set the poles about 1 to 1.5 feet high, which is high enough that the horse takes them seriously and feels the need to organize himself on the approach.

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A well-balanced horse and training program includes equal ratios of time in each gait, but many times a particular phase of a horse’s development should skew in favour of an individual gait, depending on what issues arise. Most generally, trot builds strength while walk and canter keep that strength pliable and loose. When schooling your horse, take time to consider whether the issues you face stem from the need to strengthen his postural or his gymnastic muscles. Let the answer guide you when choosing your gaits and cavalletti routines.

Related: Conditioning Your Horse During Downtime

Related: Trail Horse Training in the Off Season

More by Jec Ballou

Main Photo: Pam MacKenzie

 

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