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How to ride better downward transitions for top marks with advice from an Olympic medallist

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Whatever downward transitions you’re working on, turn the 6.5s into 8s or higher with the advice and exercises from Laura Tomlinson in this exclusive article for H&H subscribers

“You have to keep the energy behind and up in front,” Laura Tomlinson says.

You see the marker coming. You’ve practised riding downward transitions at home. You’re waiting, waiting… then bam. You hit the transition as you pass the letter, right in front of the judge. Surely that’s worth a decent mark?

But later, hopefully with a burger in hand, you grab your test sheet, and there it is: a 6.5.

A 6.5! How? You were bang on the marker.

Here’s why accuracy isn’t the whole story – and how to turn those 6.5s into higher marks.

The moment you ask for a downward transition – canter-trot, canter-walk or trot-walk – every weakness shows up: loss of balance, dropping the contact, switching off behind or tipping onto the forehand.

As Olympic medallist Laura Tomlinson puts it: “If you keep them too round in the downward transition, they fall on the floor. They load the front end, and the hindleg disappears.”

Ride downward transitions well, and everything in the test becomes easier. Ride them badly, and the picture unravels fast.

So if you’re wondering how to ride downward transitions with balance, control and clarity, here’s what really matters.

What the judge wants to see in downward transitions

Good downward transitions show:

  • A clear, prompt reaction
  • Uphill balance, not a collapse forward
  • Active hindlegs both before and after the transition
  • A steady, elastic contact
  • A horse that waits for the rider

The judge is looking for carrying power, not a shut-down. As Laura says, “You have to keep the energy behind and up in front.”

Why downward transitions fall apart

Most issues with downward transitions come back to the same bad habits.

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