Her experience, knowledge and success did not come for" free". They were a result of a lot of hard work, sweat, personal sacrifice and investment. We were offfered a peice of this for free. To quote my daughter when she looks 'fabulous' - "Don't hate...appreciate. "
I concur. When we open up our minds, use what we like, avoid judging each other harshly...EVERYONE is happier. (Beginning with ourselves..) :)
It seems the Olympic Qualified Judges see Lisa Wilcox's skills and foundation work in Dressage differently than you see them.
We shall await your participation in the next Olympics, the release of your next Dressage Training DVD... or the invitation to your next Clinic or Gran Prix Test...
*Until then-I would like to thank Olympian Lisa Wilcox for taking the time out of her schedule to share her knowlege and training tips.
Yesterday, I had the pleasure of watching Ms. Wilcox work a few young horses in Wellington. (along with an equally impressed Oldenberg Judge that happened to be in town)
Her riding and schooling was a picture of quiet grace and elegance.
I am certain you would not make these harse criticisms without an impressive resume of training experience, educational certitfications, judging credentials or perhaps an Olympic medal yourself ...
Thourughness? I´d think it shows to achieve a stiff, tensed up movement, a numb hind end and a straight, immotile back. Looks very uncomfortable to sit- (Apparently)
Where is the easyness, the swinging, the elegance? Bouncing outside leg to avoid breaking out of the line, but outside shoulder breaking out (stiff hand inside), front line always behind vertical- THATS WRONG WRONG WRONG and has nothing to do with thoroughness.
I completely agree with you. The reins are tense and the front end behind the vertical... far to much tension and too much hands, no release of the aids... that is not collection, this is a frame achieved by force.
Her experience, knowledge and success did not come for" free". They were a result of a lot of hard work, sweat, personal sacrifice and investment. We were offfered a peice of this for free. To quote my daughter when she looks 'fabulous' - "Don't hate...appreciate. "
I concur. When we open up our minds, use what we like, avoid judging each other harshly...EVERYONE is happier. (Beginning with ourselves..) :)
~Mary Beth Klock Perez~ Miami, Fl
mbklock 1 year ago
It seems the Olympic Qualified Judges see Lisa Wilcox's skills and foundation work in Dressage differently than you see them.
We shall await your participation in the next Olympics, the release of your next Dressage Training DVD... or the invitation to your next Clinic or Gran Prix Test...
*Until then-I would like to thank Olympian Lisa Wilcox for taking the time out of her schedule to share her knowlege and training tips.
mbklock 1 year ago 5
Impressive comment Nordkumaedchen....
Yesterday, I had the pleasure of watching Ms. Wilcox work a few young horses in Wellington. (along with an equally impressed Oldenberg Judge that happened to be in town)
Her riding and schooling was a picture of quiet grace and elegance.
I am certain you would not make these harse criticisms without an impressive resume of training experience, educational certitfications, judging credentials or perhaps an Olympic medal yourself ...
mbklock 1 year ago
w0o0w
Sophaki4 2 years ago
Thourughness? I´d think it shows to achieve a stiff, tensed up movement, a numb hind end and a straight, immotile back. Looks very uncomfortable to sit- (Apparently)
Where is the easyness, the swinging, the elegance? Bouncing outside leg to avoid breaking out of the line, but outside shoulder breaking out (stiff hand inside), front line always behind vertical- THATS WRONG WRONG WRONG and has nothing to do with thoroughness.
Nordkuhmaedchen 2 years ago 4
I completely agree with you. The reins are tense and the front end behind the vertical... far to much tension and too much hands, no release of the aids... that is not collection, this is a frame achieved by force.
MesrineSandra 1 year ago 2