Gentle Art of Horseback Riding

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A01=Gincy Self Bucklin
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Author_Gincy Self Bucklin
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Barrel racing
beginner horseback riding guide
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=SK
Category=WSN
confidence in horseback riding
COP=United States
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
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English riding
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Equestrian
Equestrian equipment
equestrian skills development
equestrian training book
Equine sports medicine
Equine therapy
Eventing
gentle riding methods
Gincy Self Bucklin
half-seat position tips
Horse anatomy
horse and rider bond
horse behavior body language
horse communication cues
horse riding tips for adults
horse-friendly riding methods
Horseback riding
horseback riding basics
horseback riding techniques
horseback riding with empathy
how to overcome riding fear
how to saddle a horse
interpreting horse behavior
Language_English
learning to jump horses
mindful horseback riding
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rider and horse relationship
riding instructor guide
riding lessons for adults
riding posture and balance
softlaunch
walk trot canter transitions

Product details

  • ISBN 9781450412742
  • Weight: 839g
  • Dimensions: 216 x 279mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Mar 2013
  • Publisher: Human Kinetics Publishers
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Horseback riding is one of the world's most popular activities. Much has been written about the various styles, techniques, and competitive events in the sport. But all too often resources, authors, and even instructors neglect the most important and unique aspect of riding: the relationship between rider and horse.

In The Gentle Art of Horseback Riding, Gincy Self Bucklin shares her horse-friendly approach for developing comfortable, competent riders. Its step-by-step lesson format makes it an excellent resource for those who teach riding to others.

Whether you are just beginning or have ridden before, Bucklin's methods can improve your skills and make you a better, more confident rider.

Inside The Gentle Art of Horseback Riding, you'll learn that the key to success at every level is understanding your horse and how to relate to him physically, mentally, and emotionally. This will help you advance more quickly, feel more confident, and have more fun.

You'll also discover much, much more:

• The seven steps for dealing with fear-related stress

• Interpreting your horse's behavior and body language

• Saddling up, riding in half-seat positions, and using the reins

• Basic movements, including walk, trot, canter, turns, and transitions

ò More advanced trotting, cantering, galloping, hill work, and fence jumping skills

Whether you have a serious or casual interest in the sport as a whole or just one of its many disciplines, The Gentle Art of Horseback Riding is a must-read. Insightful and fascinating, it will enhance the riding experience for you and your horse.

Gincy Self Bucklin has been teaching riding for more than 60 years. Her students have included recreational riders of all ages and levels, many of whom have also shown successfully and some of whom have become professionals themselves. While many experienced instructors teach only advanced riders, Gincy has also worked extensively with beginners and intermediates, believing that in order to be successful at the advanced level, riders must know and perfect the fundamentals from the start. She now works with instructors to share the teaching methods presented in her books.

Gincy's mother was well-known equestrian author Margaret Cabell Self. Gincy was also fortunate to grow up in an area that had many world-class instructors and clinicians, including Sally Swift, George Morris, and Nuno Oliveira. Some of her early instructors trained with European trainers during the 1920s and '30s while the cavalry, where much of the equine knowledge was developed, was still in existence. Gincy is a retired Centered Riding instructor and is an American Riding Instructors Association level IV instructor.

Gincy has been writing about horses and riding since 1987. She is the author of What Your Horse Wants You to Know, How Your Horse Wants You to Ride, and More How Your Horse Wants You to Ride. She has been a contributor to national horse magazines, including Equus and Horse Illustrated. Currently she writes a regular column for Riding Instructor, the quarterly publication of the American Riding Instructors Association (ARIA), and maintains her own website, http://whatyourhorsewants.com. Gincy lives in East Dummerston, Vermont.

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