Next Issue

May 2013

  • Sizing up cinches and girths
  • After the fall
  • Guilt-free grooming
  • CONFORMATION INSIGHTS: Hoof balance
  • PREVENTION: Lyme disease
  • CASE REPORT: Beetle in a haystack
  • TRUE TALE: What brings me back

Books & DVDs

from HorseBooksEtc

Related Topics

from the Forums

Free Newsletters

Sign Up for our Free Newsletters

Physical Causes of Canter Lead Problems

When your horse won't pick up the correct lead, poor training isn't usually to blame.

Back pain, hock pain or other lameness issues can make it difficult for a horse to pick up the proper lead.

The concept of leads at the canter or lope is simple enough:When a horse is on the correct lead, he starts each stride with the outside hind leg and ends it with the inside foreleg. Riders cue their horses to encourage this sequence and quickly learn to recognize by sight and feel when a lead is wrong. Returning to the trot and asking for the canter again usually remedies the situation right away.

When a horse consistently picks up the wrong lead, however, it’s easy to get frustrated. There are many tricks and techniques for getting a horse to take a particular lead, but these ignore an important reality: A horse who consistently picks up the wrong lead probably has a physiological reason for doing so.

Horses naturally want to canter on the correct lead because it helps them keep their balance. The trailing (outside) foreleg at the canter or lope resists the centrifugal force that pulls the horse to the outside of the turn. If you watch horses play in the pasture, most will choose the correct lead when cantering through tight turns or switch to it at some point to steady themselves. And even in their early under-saddle experiences, young horses will tend to pick up the correct lead naturally.

Advertisement

When a horse always resists cantering on a particular lead, it’s usually because it’s physically difficult or painful to do so. Lead problems may result from discomfort or stiffness anywhere in the legs, body or back. Many times the horse isn’t overtly lame at the walk or trot, and he may even be able to pick up that lead at liberty with little problem without the added weight of a rider, but it’s still a physiological problem and not a training issue. Likewise, lead problems may signal a malfunction in the neurologic system.

If your horse is having lead issues, set aside training until you’ve had your veterinarian and farrier weigh in on the problem. Identifying and correcting any lameness or neurologic issues, which may take several months or weeks, is the only sure-fire way to help your horse.

Posted in Basic Schooling, Health, Horse Care, Lameness, Riding & Training, Training | | Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Get 12 issues of EQUUS for only $14.97!
Name:
Address Line 1:
Address Line 2:
City:
State:
Zip:
Email:
Subscribe!
Untitled Document

Subscribe to EQUUS

Subscribe to EQUUS

Subscribe Today
& Get a Free Gift!

Subscribe 
Give a Gift
Customer Service
Digital Subscriptions