![]() Sometimes more dangerous creatures come into the forest. Walking through the forest you can meet rabbits, deer, wild boars, goats, rams, and even foxes. In the forests there are various predators and herbivores. ![]() Special skills are also available that allow you to increase the horse's speed.ĭuring your adventure, you will see many different creatures. Once your level increases, you can spend the points on attack, energy, or life. To survive in the forest, you need to use all the possibilities! Obtain experience by performing tasks, attacking other animals, and collecting food. You can find various kinds of skins, funny hats, saddles for riding, and armor! Buy more things for your horse to make it stronger!Ĭustomize the appearance of the horse as you like. When you are at home, you can find many interesting things. The horse can rest and gain a new strength for his journeys. ![]() Raise your horse's level and improve your family members' characteristics! The islands are dangerous, you need to find a partner with whom you can have little foals. Many more adventures are waiting for your horse! Compete in speed races with other animals. Beautiful new indoor school and decent horses.If you like this game, you can also try our unicorn family simulator game. Private lessons at Fitzworthy £50 an hour. We spend as long on the machines as students can manage!įurther practise on the simulators and any topics of discussion further clarified.įor those who would like to put into practice what you have learned, but on a real horse, lessons are available at Fitzworthy Equestrian Centre, by prior arrangement (please contact them direct). Practise on the 4 simulators to correct and improve all participants. Later if time, video lecture showing correct and incorrect interaction with the horses movement. Questions welcome throughout!ĭismounted workshop to clarify and explain what we will learn and practise on the Equisimulators.Īssessment of each participant, on the simulators. Heather or her assistant Tallulah McIntosh will demonstrate the rights and wrongs of riding, on one of our Iberian horses. Meet in simulator room and Heather will brief and also ask you to tell us a bit about yourself, and what you hope to get out of the workshop. Refreshments are provided on both days (tea, coffee, biscuits, crisps etc.) but please bring your own sandwiches. Accommodation is not included but there are many excellent B&Bs nearby. Refinement of the aids and generally demystifying riding with clear, logical explanations and demonstrations. ![]() The workshop will cover a lot more than just work on the simulators. As a specialist seat trainer for 50 years, Heather Moffett has more experience than anyone in the world, teaching with these machines internationally and in the UK for over 20 years. There are 4 Equisimulator machines here at East Leigh Farm. Very often the explanations that they learn here are an absolute revelation - the phrase 'But why have I never been told this before' has to be one that we hear during every workshop!Įquisimulator/Introduction to Classical Riding. Many very experienced riders come to East Leigh for remedial work on their position, ability to absorb the horse's movement, or frequently both. To have to carry the rider's weight is not natural to him, and every time the rider loses balance, the horse has to readjust his own balance. If you are being taught to use so much effort on a horse that you are the colour of beetroot when you get off, then you are working much too hard! Every extra movement that you make also means extra work for your horse. When you move together as one unit, riding becomes effortless. Put two and two together, in sync, and you make one. Practise does indeed make perfect, but only the right sort! Putting it simply, the horse has two sides to his back and you have two sides to your rear end. The Equisimulator allows us to show the rider the precise movements of the lower back and pelvis, so that instead of the instructor telling the student to 'sit deeper', 'relax your lower back' or 'follow the movement', all of which are more or less meaningless to the novice rider, we are able to show the rider precisely how to mirror the horse's movements, in a fraction of the normal time taken to learn by the old 'practise makes perfect' methods of teaching. In this way, the rider learns far more quickly to adhere to the saddle, enhancing safety and enjoyment and also, most importantly, saving the horse much discomfort from the rider bouncing about on his back. These workshops aim to clarify and demystify the techniques of riding, through simple, but very detailed explanations and visual demonstrations, coupled with unique 'hands on' work to ensure that each student really is given the correct feel of how to synchronise with the horse.
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