Pirouette (dressage)

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Beginning the canter pirouette to the right.
Beginning the canter pirouette to the right.

A pirouette is a two-track lateral movement asked of a horse in dressage, in which the animal makes a circle with its front end around a smaller circle made by the hind end. Specifically, the front legs and outside hind leg should travel around the inside hind leg, with the horse remaining slightly bent in the direction of travel. The horse may perform the movement at the walk or canter, although the pirouette at the walk is more commonly called the turn on the haunches.

As in all dressage, the horse should remain relaxed, engaged, and responsive, with the poll as the highest point. Ideally, the pirouette will be almost in-place, although many horses perform a slightly larger pirouette. A pirouette may be performed either as a 360-degree turn (full pirouette), 270 degrees (¾-pirouette), or 180-degrees (half-pirouette). Some dressage tests call for two full pirouettes in a row (720 degrees).

Contents

[edit] Number of beats

When performed at the canter, the gait actually becomes four-beat, with the inside hind leg touching the ground slightly before the outside fore leg [1]. This is mainly because the high degree of collection causes a separation of the diagonal pair, with the forehand greatly elevated.

[edit] Faults

The canter pirouette is a very difficult exercise when performed correctly.

  • The horse should not throw his body around, fall inward, or let his hindquarters fall to the outside, but should remain balanced.
  • The horse should not plant one of his hind legs and move around it—as seen in the western spin—but should lift them up and place them down with each stride, maintaining the purity of the gait.
  • The horse should not loose the rhythm of the canter, or fall onto his forehand.
  • The horse should not make an oval-shaped movement with his hindquarters, but should inscribe a perfect circle.
  • The horse should never step back.
  • Each bound should be equal.

[edit] Links

To see a canter pirouette, see [2] and [3]. To see a walk pirouette, see [4].

[edit] Sources

  • Purity of Gaits in the Canter Pirouette [5]
  • Comparison of the temporal kinematics of the canter pirouette and collected canter (study on the footfalls of the canter pirouette) [6]
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