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How to choose a riding instructor

How to choose a riding instructor.
A good riding instructor brings out the best in your riding.

Choosing a riding instructor to teach you how to ride (as opposed to a trainer who trains your horse) can be tricky. Here in the U.S., instructors do not need any third-party certifications (in the U.K. the British Horse Society, or BHS, offers trainer certification), anyone can hang out their shingle and proclaim themselves a trainer.

So, how do you evaluate a potential riding instructor? It’s not as simple as choosing a good rider or even a successful competitor. The ability to teach is different. You need to find someone who can help you understand the techniques of riding. And you need to find someone with a teaching style that jives with how you like to learn.

Here are some guidelines to evaluating an instructor:

Once you have selected an instructor, it’s okay to continue to evaluate their teaching style and make sure that they are the right trainer for you.

Ask yourself:

Generally I give a trainer two to three lessons before I make the decision whether to keep riding with them. For the most part, I’ll try whatever they recommend and see if it works. Occasionally I’ll come across someone whose teaching just doesn’t jive with what I’ve learned before. Since I’ve been lucky enough to ride with some excellent trainers, if they tell me to do something that’s really off base, I don’t come back.

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