A Good Seat Takes Focused Practice… And A Good Seat Doesn’t Always Look “Good”
When it comes to riding, most folks can appreciate the value of a good seat. But there are two common misunderstandings around a good seat that are important to consider:
A balanced and correct seat takes time, and one of the best places for this to happen is on the longe line.
A classically correct seat does NOT guarantee effective communication.
The art of riding is, at its most basic level, keeping the horse in between you and the ground. This takes balance, coordination, feel for rhythm, and a degree of physical strength & flexibility. It also involves developing competency in different types of seats- half seat, full seat, posting, and two-point. Through the decades, riding schools around the world have found that the best place these skills can be effectively developed is on the longe line. On a longe line, you are able to focus on yourself, as opposed to controlling the horse. This gives you opportunity to develop the skills of your seat before you need to use them to ride independently. Far too often, riding schools neglect this integral part of rider education. So many issues can be mitigated later in a rider’s career through building a foundation of skill and understanding on the longe line.
The second misunderstanding is… many folks confuse good riding with the ability to sit pretty. Think about your seat like a tool. You can have the prettiest, most expensive looking tool in the world… but if you don’t know how to USE it, then it has very little purpose. This is why you may notice many high level riders from various disciplines with clear faults in their seat. These riders have achieved high level horsemanship due to superior feel for the horse. They know how to apply and release pressure with their bodies in ways that guide the horse’s movement, regardless of how “pretty” their seat is. Of course, a quality tool lends itself to more effective work, so all the best riders in the world work to improve their seat in ways that will help them communicate. That said… At the end of the day, it’s not how pretty you look but how effectively you USE your seat to have a conversation with the horse that really counts.
There are two take home messages for riders on this front:
We should all be working to improve our seat and all take seat lessons.
At the end of the day, your ability to communicate with your horse is more important than type of seat, physical ability (or disability), or body type.
To us, these are actually quite heartening messages, although they can feel contradictory. We all have our limitations and challenges. Some bodies just don’t have the elements needed to easily achieve a pretty seat. We all should continuously push ourselves to improve our riding posture… but the best seat is the one that facilitates a harmonious understanding between horse and rider.