collected canter, or in western terms, a lope Andalusiangirl
Yes you can make your horse canter whilst staying seated
A pirouette at a canter is when you make a full circle (left or right) on your horse's back feet. Its the same at the walk, except the pirouette at the canter is at a canter, if a slow one (your horse should be able to canter on the spot).
The collected canter feels similar to the regular working canter except the movement is more powerful and more contained. You can feel the horse's hindquarters working harder underneath you and the movement is more up-and-down than forward-and-back.
No; the gallop is just a faster, longer-striding canter (or, more accurately, the canter is a slower, more collected gallop).
Start by mounting your horse and get into a canter and then make your horse canter in an anti-clockwise circle and your cantering on the left rein.
To tell (or ask) your horse to trot in French is:"Aller au canter."Translation is: To go into a canter.
-Of course a horse can go into a canter without having to walk. However, most horses don't do it naturally unless frightened. The best way to do it is train the horse to go into a canter after a certain signal or movement by your. -Starting into a canter without a walk can be taught. It takes a lot of patience to do so.
A canter pirouette is a dressage movement where the horse turns on the haunches at the canter. It requires the horse to be collected and engaged, executing a small, controlled circle while maintaining rhythm and balance. Canter pirouettes are typically performed in advanced levels of dressage competition.
Once you get into a fast trot, kick the horse harder, (without hurting him/her of course) and lean forward a bet. If you kick strong enough, the house will break into a canter.
By telling your horse to canter...but your horse needs to know how to canter and needs lots of practise, and he also needs to know the command "canter". after he/she gets what you want, practise going from a trot to a canter. soon enough your horse will be transitioning smoothly! good luck!
I lost my balance when the horse began to canter.