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Dressage with Amelia
Amelia Newcomb
203 episodes
3 days ago
These sessions are recordings from Amelia's LIVE Q&A sessions on Facebook.
We cover a variety of Dressage topics - from basic Dressage concepts up to more advanced exercises.
"As a dressage trainer, my goal is to make good training accessible to everyone who is interested in learning. I want to help YOU learn to love your ride!"
~ Amelia
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Education
Sports
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All content for Dressage with Amelia is the property of Amelia Newcomb and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
These sessions are recordings from Amelia's LIVE Q&A sessions on Facebook.
We cover a variety of Dressage topics - from basic Dressage concepts up to more advanced exercises.
"As a dressage trainer, my goal is to make good training accessible to everyone who is interested in learning. I want to help YOU learn to love your ride!"
~ Amelia
Show more...
Education
Sports
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts126/v4/de/15/ad/de15ad70-8d4d-b32d-442d-7e79d87cadcd/mza_11881081469437541539.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Five Training Pillars for Progress Q&A
Dressage with Amelia
26 minutes 21 seconds
1 month ago
Five Training Pillars for Progress Q&A

This week’s live Q&A centered on the core training principles that keep you and your horse progressing, even when things get tricky. We also chatted about the new YouTube series launching next month (behind-the-scenes and real-life training!) and shared updates from 30 Days to Round.


What we covered

  • Timing and proactivity: Don’t wait until your horse grabs the bit or throws the head—ride proactively with bend, flexion, and release before the problem starts.
  • Breaking it down: Complex movements like half pass can’t be “fixed” inside the half pass. Instead, go back to the components: forward, bend, sideways, alignment—then put it all back together.
  • Consistency: Just like school for kids, horses develop mental focus and physical strength over years. Little-by-little work creates lifelong progress.
  • Rider position and clarity: Your seat and shoulders should match the horse’s body in lateral work. Inside seat bone down, shoulders parallel to shoulders, hips with hips. Stay soft, not stiff.
  • Reward and positivity: Never miss an opportunity to praise. Clear, consistent, positive training helps your horse stay motivated and willing.


Key takeaways

  • Work on inside rein to inside hind to improve control and suppleness.
  • Circles and lateral exercises are your go-to when a horse gets heavy, resistant, or pops the head up.
  • Don’t measure engagement as “always there.” Even Grand Prix horses warm up in a normal trot before reaching true collection. Engagement comes in moments, not minutes.
  • For younger horses, think “kindergarten attention span.” Keep it short, consistent, and gradually increase both mental focus and physical load.


Happy Riding,


Amelia


PS. Don't forget to RSVP for my FREE Flying Changes Webinar on Oct 5th!

Dressage with Amelia
These sessions are recordings from Amelia's LIVE Q&A sessions on Facebook.
We cover a variety of Dressage topics - from basic Dressage concepts up to more advanced exercises.
"As a dressage trainer, my goal is to make good training accessible to everyone who is interested in learning. I want to help YOU learn to love your ride!"
~ Amelia