Schooling and Riding the Sport Horse:A Modern American
Hunter/Jumper System |
| Paul D. Cronin |
| Foreword by Joe Fargis |
| 288 pages, 6 x 9 |
| 20 color and 63 b&w illustrations |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2287-9 $29.95 |
| Available November 2004 |
 |
"If the horses we ride could talk, they would say, 'Read
this book; this is how to ride me.'"
from the foreword
by Joe Fargis
A protégé of the legendary Vladimir S. Littauer
and for more than thirty years director of the riding program
at Sweet Briar College, Paul D. Cronin is a well-known and highly
respected trainer and riding instructor. Schooling and Riding
the Sport Horse is Cronin's clear and practical guide to
getting the most out of your horse in a humane and sensitive way.
Beginning with a brief history of educated horsemanship from
the earliest published riding masters of the sixteenth century,
Cronin clarifies the differences between forward riding and classical
dressage, and how at times the two have become inappropriately
mixed. He then gives an in-depth presentation of the American
forward riding system that is the basis of hunter/jumper riding
and examines the ways in which a rider's position and controls
are essential to the training of the horse.
In the system as Cronin explains it, the three basic pillars
are position, controls, and schooling. In clear language, he walks
the reader from the beginning stages of training through advanced
jumping and cross-country work. He sets out proper methods of
early schooling of the young, green, or reclaimed horse, based
on freedom of movement under the weight of the rider at the walk,
trot, canter, and jump; of gaining the horse's trust and cooperation;
and of establishing agility and calmness in the horse at all gaits
and over fences.
Schooling and Riding the Sport Horse is an important
book on horsemanship for riding instructors, trainers, and amateur
riders alike.
Paul D. Cronin is Professor Emeritus and Director
of Riding Emeritus at Sweet Briar College. For more than forty years,
he has been a clinician teaching sucessful amateurs, teachers, and
professional riders throughout the United States. Joe Fargis
won an Olympic gold medal in 1984 and remains a top national and
international competitor.