Tuesday, 19 April 2022

Derriere products are an essential on the holiday packing list!

What happened when Derriere Equestrian’s sales, customer care and marketing coordinator Charlotte Goodall took a trip to Romania in her Derrieres?

I’ve always wanted to go on a riding holiday abroad and having previously experienced some of the UK trips offered by The World on Horseback, their organised trip to Romania seemed like a fantastic opportunity. I was not disappointed. Traveling back in time to explore the unspoilt, unfenced bucolic ambience of Transylvania was a truly staggering experience.


Our itinerary consisted of 4 days in the saddle through never-ending countryside, woodland, and traditional villages, passing herds of goats, cows, sheep whilst being cautious of meeting the black bears (thankfully passing fresh prints in the soft ground was as close as we got!) It is safe to say the experience wouldn’t have been the same if it wasn’t for my Derriere Equestrian® underwear!

Averaging about 20km per day, experiencing nothing short of ultimate comfort in the saddle enhanced my ridden experience, both feeling good and looking stylish allowed me to further soak up the sun, relish the beautiful scenery, trusted horses, and charming company. 



Our days included stops at visiting beautiful sights and majestic churches in various local villages.  The food definition of field to fork,  elegantly presented, traditional, organic, and sustainably sourced, every mealtime was a delight, definitely keeping standards as high as the overall riding experience was.

The Derriere Equestrian® Performance Padded Panty combines science with style, scientifically designed for the equestrian sport, eradicating discomfort, and reducing concussion. The use of high quality Italian breathable, bacteriostatic and moisture wicking fabric ensures a feeling of both optimum health, hygiene, and comfort.




The new bespoke Derriere Equestrian Activewear collection pleasantly compliments the equestrian underwear range. They work in harmony together to provide core pieces for your equestrian wardrobe. The technical tops and riding leggings combine high quality, functionality with exceptional comfort. The advanced moisture wicking and temperature regulating properties incorporated into the breathable, quick drying sporting technology fabric encourages high performance whilst providing ultimate comfort and support. The elegant design is flattering to the body and offers a secure yet subtle grip to the saddle. 

I would recommend both the underwear and activewear combination of products as essential to riders of all disciplines.  The Derriere Equestrian Underwear has been designed to eradicate seamlines diminishing the risk of the dreaded VPL. Ensuring discretion and style whilst enabling riders like myself to ride for miles in the saddle with no negative implications.


The World on Horseback provided me with the most mesmerising riding holiday in Transylvania,  the trip assured adventure as well as a feeling of being immersed in culture. Derriere Equestrian® provided me with ultimate confidence and comfort on these rides.


What did the other riders think about riding in their Derrieres? 





 

 


Monday, 11 April 2022

Boosting rider balance and core stabilisation on the lunge

 

Balance and core stabilisation are key for all horse riders; these aspects, essentially two sides of the same coin, not only keep us safely on board, but also allow us to be more explicit with our aids when riding. This can relate to the accuracy of the aid, for example using a leg aid at the spot that the horse responds to, based on its training; but can also relate to the subtly of an aid. For example, a barely-perceptible half halt based on the tautening of the rider’s abdominals and a subtle shift in shoulder position, as opposed to a visible rein aid.

 


Balance is perhaps something we take for granted, if we’re more experienced riders. In the days when we were learning, our balance was probably quite inconsistent, occasionally hitting the sweet spot when the rising trot felt coordinated, or euphorically landing from a jump with the weight flexibly anchored down into our ankles, heels and stirrups.

 

Mutual movement patterns

But as we progress with our riding and the training of our horses, in whatever discipline, we probably take balance for granted – yet we’re always influenced by our own and our horse’s own individual movement patterns. That’s why riding our own horse is like wearing a comfortable piece of clothing – we slip into what we know – and that can include posture that isn’t optimal. For example, an old hindleg injury that our horse has, and protects himself from aggravating, can easily translate into us dropping a shoulder or sitting with our weight too heavily on one seat bone. Often unconsciously!

 


Lovely lungeing

Here we’d like to highlight the importance of lunge lessons to identify our own limitations where symmetry and balance are concerned, and improve core stabilisation. This can be on your own horse, but it can also be revelatory to have a lesson on a different horse, to experience a different movement pattern. (Similarly, a lesson on a mechanical horse can have the same effect of being a wake-up call to our own riding patterns – and these horses have the benefit of being extremely balanced and straight!)

 

So let’s look at the benefits of lunge lessons:

·       They’re great to teach balance and lightness to the rider, or brush up on these skills.

·       Depending on how advanced the rider is, most of these exercises can be done at all three gaits: the walk, trot, and canter.

·       Lunge lessons gives the instructor control over the horse, so the rider can focus on their body, and become more mindful of the process of riding.

·       Additionally, the rider can focus on themselves and their own needs and goals, not ‘training’ the horse, which is often where their attention lies.

·       Lunge lessons with a trainer (or a session with an experienced friend who can lunge you safely) offer a chance to go back to the basics, in order to reinforce a strong foundation of posture and position.

 


Back pain and mobility

Many horse riders experience lower back pain, and working on your balance can actually promote mobility and wellness in this area. Chronic or subacute discomfort in the lower back is often called ‘subacute nonspecific low back pain’ (NSLBP); years of horse riding and falls can cause such discomfort. Studies show that core stabilisation exercise can help reduce pain, improve proprioception (awareness of the position and movement of the body), and even reduce ‘fear of movement’ – that sense that we have to protect a weak spot, in case it is aggravated. Commonly in the saddle, this can show up as the rider maintaining a very contained trot, instead of embracing (and moving comfortably with) a big, bold, forward-going trot; hunching the shoulders to protect a weak area of our back (or to avoid ‘bosom-bounce’, for women – the Derriere Sportief Bra is a boon here); or tucking our tailbone under too much, because extending the lumbar area (e.g. to create a driving sitting trot, for example in a medium trot movement), is uncomfortable.

 

Having lunge lessons therefore helps us face ‘fear of movement’ by encouraging and developing the skill of core stabilisation, for example by doing work without stirrups in a safe environment.

 

What to wear

When you’re training, consider the Derriere Equestrian range, designed for both men and women. The Derriere Equestrian Treviso Training breeches for example are great breeches to consider. They’re designed to promote optimal comfort and performance, and work in harmony with the Derriere undergarments, ensuring all fabric surfaces come together in a symbiosis that completely eliminates chaffing, abrasions and discomfort! The material content is a comfy mix of cotton, microfibre and elastane.

 


Talking of undergarments, remember to equip yourself with some comfy, supportive riding underwear. For ultimate comfort in the saddle, so you’re not thinking about discomfort when trying to hone your balance and stabilisation, try the Derriere Equestrian Performance Padded Panty, which is designed to eradicate seamlines visible through breeches and ensure no rubbing, chaffing or abrasions are created. Incorporating the Derriere Equestrian Padded Support System (DEPSS), the garments protect the perineal area (the bit between the pubic arch and the tail bone), from discomfort, and also prevent rubbing, due to innovative stitched seams. In particular, if you’re a male rider taking lunge lessons, you may find that having subtle, extra padding in your undergarments improves your intuitive riding, as you may not ‘brace’ to protect yourself in terms of ‘fear of movement’, and can instead go with the horse’s movement more naturally.




Find out more at www.derriereequestrian.com

Monday, 21 March 2022

Tackling transitions by Derriere Equestrian ambassador Erin Orford

Walk to trot transitions sound so simple, but it is so important to get the foundations right, and these basics must come before all else if you are to progress up the ladder as a successful partnership with your horse! Many horses rush the upward transition, and can hollow out in the downward transition; both should be performed consistently if you want to achieve good marks in a test. The horse shouldn’t anticipate the next move, e.g. you would lose valuable marks in a dressage competition if going from a free walk on a long rein into a rushed jog, rather than a medium walk! 

When schooling, try to establish a soft medium walk; forward but not too fast or rushed! The horse should not lean on you, but should be working into the reins and accepting of the contact - this is your communication line. ‘Sponging’ the reins with your fingers can be used to encourage them to soften rather than pulling or using the reins for your own balance. The horse should keep the momentum going without you having to nag with the leg but you should also be able to use it to influence their body without them blocking against it or rushing forward so they stay between the leg and the rein. (If you use your schooling whip as an adapted leg aid, be sure to use it to back up the softening rein aid, to encourage forward movement.)
Handy halts 
Once you have established a nice walk, as an exercise, ask for a good, square halt. Use your body as a half-halt to shorten the steps, whilst still riding forwards into the halt. One of the most common errors I see is riders stopping from the rein and taking the leg pressure completely off, which would encourage the horse to fall into the halt, and to lean on you. Ride forwards into any transition to keep the horse stepping under and pushing forwards and upwards into the transition, rather than doing it front to back from the rein, resulting in the hind legs being left behind.

The preparation for the halt is the most important part of getting a good halt, so check the horse’s balance and straightness (e.g. are they falling one way or another?), as if they’re crooked and falling one way going into it, this will be how they halt. You should be able to prepare for the halt without the horse anticipating it, so in training, only ask them to actually halt when you have them in the right place during the steps before it. They should step forwards into the halt, and stand in a nice balance, ready to push forwards out of the halt. If they leave a leg behind, always correct them by stepping forwards, rather than backwards. 





Walk-trot transitions 
For a nice upward walk-trot transition, the horse must be walking for himself, so that you can give a light aid to ask them to move up into trot. If you’re having to nag them in the walk, you’re going to have to make even more effort to move up into trot, so think about how much effort you’re having to put in, compared to your horse! Give a light aid and then if they don’t respond, back it up with a quicker leg aid, making sure to reward them when you get the response you want. As in the walk, the horse should trot for themselves without you needing to constantly remind them, so if you have a lazy horse that relies on the leg, your goal is to be able to use less leg, and for them to keep trotting. If you have a hot or sharp horse that runs away from the leg, your goal is to be able to keep your leg on their side a bit more (almost hugging), without them running away from it. You can use your body weight by moving your shoulders slightly forwards (marginally!), to ask for them to move forwards, and by sitting up a bit more, to ask them to wait. 


Trouble shooting 
To check if your horse is truly on the aids, you can set yourself markers to trot or walk at, and then you can see how long it takes your horse to respond, as in a dressage test, you need to have the control to be able to perform a movement or transition right on the marker. You can do transitions both on and off the track to check you have control of their body before during and after the transition, and notice any changes during this. It’s also worth checking your own rider balance and position; it’s easiest for the horse to carry us when we’re in balance, and they want to be directly under our weight. So, if we’re moving all over the place, it makes it more difficult for them to be straight! Once you are able to do these transitions effectively, you can also add in transitions within the pace by riding forwards and then collecting the trot a little, and then forwards again. This will also help to develop the expression within the trot, and allow you to play with the gears; but make sure to start with small changes within the gears before building this up, so that the horse stays soft and supple over the back! 


Downward transitions 
To gain a pleasing downward trot-walk transition, you should go into sitting trot, maintain your forward energy and use your body to ask the horse to start to sit and shorten the trot steps to help their balance, going into the walk. If you need to, you can use the outside rein to give a half halt, but make sure to give it straight after, so that you don’t rely on it to slow down, and you’re not pulling the horse into walk. If they are bracing going into the transition, try to play with slowing the trot down within your trot work, whilst keeping the softness, so that you can keep them in a good balance, and soft during the preparation of the transition. This will allow you to ride forwards into the transition, rather than using the rein to pull them backwards into it. Over time and repetition, this will improve and your horse will get stronger within this, so that he can maintain a good balance and outline throughout. 





What to wear 
When you’re training, the Derriere Equestrian Treviso Training breeches are great breeches to consider. They’re designed to promote optimal comfort and performance, and work in harmony with the Derriere undergarments, ensuring all fabric surfaces come together in a symbiosis that completely eliminates chaffing, abrasions and discomfort! The material content is a comfy mix of cotton, microfibre and elastane. 
All about Erin Orford Derriere Equestrian sponsored rider Erin Orford is one of Britain’s most determined and inspirational dressage riders. A qualified UKCC Level 2 Dressage coach, Erin has her sights set on the Paris 2024 Paralympics and beyond. Visit - www.erinorforddressage.com