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Why Cantering Feels So Hard (And How to Make It Click)

If you’ve ever felt like cantering is a battle you’re losing, you’re not alone.


Walking feels manageable. Trotting, you can figure out. But cantering? For many riders it’s the gait where everything seems to fall apart. You bounce, you grip, you tense up. The worse it feels, the harder you try, which only makes it worse. The good news is the problem is almost never that you can’t canter. It’s that your body is doing exactly what bodies do when they feel unstable, it’s bracing.


But bracing is the opposite of what you need to do right then!


The horse and rider can be one fluid unit

Cantering - What’s Actually Happening


Cantering is a rolling, three-beat gait with a moment of suspension, all four feet off the ground, built into every stride. Your hips need to follow a smooth, looping motion, almost like the arc of a rocking chair. When it works, it’s one of the most beautiful feelings in riding.


But the moment you tense your lower back, clamp with your knees, or try to “keep up” with the horse, you lock out that motion. Your seat lifts off the saddle, you start bouncing, and your horse feels it immediately. Now both of you are tense.


How to Unlock It


Stop trying to stay with the horse. That instinct to hold on and match every movement actually works against you. Instead, think about letting the horse move underneath you. Your job is to stay soft and centred while the horse does the work. Relax your lower back. Let your hips swing. Breathe.


Get on the lunge. If you have access to a quiet, well-schooled horse and an instructor who can lunge you, this is gold. Without reins or steering to worry about, you can focus entirely on feeling the rhythm. Try holding the front of the saddle with your inside hand and maybe even the back with your outside hand, this helps draw your seat deep and places your body, and more particularly your legs, the correct position.



Check your legs. If you’re gripping with your knees or thighs, you’re pushing yourself out of the saddle. Let your weight sink down through your heels. Think of your leg draping around the horse, long and relaxed, rather than clamping on for dear life.


Soften your hands. Tight reins send your horse mixed signals—your seat is asking for forward while your hands are saying stop. Allow a soft, elastic contact that follows the natural nod of the horse’s head.


Most importantly - Be Patient With Yourself


Cantering is one of those skills where the breakthrough often comes suddenly. You struggle for weeks, and then one day your body just gets it. The moment you stop overthinking and let the rhythm carry you, everything changes.


So if it feels impossible right now, trust the process. Every bouncy, messy attempt is teaching your body something. The canter is in there, you just have to relax enough to find it.


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