THE INVISIBLE LANGUAGE WITH THE POLO HORSE
That’s a common phrase among players who
have ridden a true crack (a top-class horse).
1) Body weight as language
In high-level polo, aids or commands — the
reins, the voice, the legs — are only part of the repertoire. The most powerful
communication happens in silence.
The weight of the body, a subtle rotation
of the pelvis, and the transfer of pressure from one stirrup to the other are
minimal variations which, when well executed and received, can trigger complex
maneuvers: sharp turns, side changes, immediate stops. Here we enter the realm
of the invisible aid or postural aid. Stable horse Head
Protector
The player doesn’t need to pull on the
reins or push; he simply places his body in a particular way — and the horse
understands. The best players do this even at full gallop, when they are half-off
the saddle in a hitting position. The horse feels it all the same.
2) Self-carriage: the hidden key of the
refined player
The term self-carriage (in Spanish
propioporte) refers to the rider’s ability to support his own body without
letting dead weight fall on the horse’s back.
It is more than balance — it is active
postural control, the precise muscle tone and awareness of how to position
oneself with a moving horse. A player with self-carriage becomes a clean,
precise aid. His body doesn’t interfere — it guides. By contrast, a player who
“hangs” or leans on the horse creates confusion and stiffness. A sensitive
horse blocks, loses fluidity; it’s as if communication shuts down.
3) Shared proprioception: a common channel
of perception
Proprioception is the ability to sense
one’s own body in space. In polo, when horse and player reach fine attunement,
something fascinating occurs: shared proprioception. Both bodies feel each
other. The horse perceives where the player is without looking, and the player senses
what the horse will do before it happens.
In such moments, they move as if they
shared a single nervous system — forming what could be called a functional
unity between horse and rider. The rider’s reflexes — like the oculomotor
reflex (which begins with sight, is processed in the brain, and flows through
the body) — transmit downward, and the horse responds even before the command
becomes conscious.
4) The aid of the seat bones: minimal
pressure, maximum clarity
Shifting from one seat bone (ischium) to
the other, supported by the stirrup base, is one of the oldest and most
effective aids. In a trained horse, moving the body’s weight two centimeters to
the left is enough to prepare a change of direction.
This body language is geometric — it
depends on how the hips rotate, how weight falls on the inside stirrup, how the
thigh (adductor) embraces or releases. The most sensitive players scarcely need
to use the reins. They mount, breathe, and play — and the horse plays with
them. Horse
brain guard
5) The horse that listens to the body
Some horses stand out for speed, others for
strength. But the true cracks have another virtue: they listen to the rider’s
body.
They seem to “obey thought.” It’s not magic
— it’s the result of being respected, listened to, and clearly trained through
the body.
These horses often perceive more through
the seat than through the legs.
6) Toward invisible pedagogy
Teaching players to use the body as an aid
is an art in itself. It requires developing postural sensitivity, awareness of
one’s axis, and dynamic contact with the stirrups. This is learned through
hours in the saddle. When, as a coach, you achieve that a player rides with the
body and the horse responds with joy, something changes — the game transforms.
The connection — that invisible bridge between player and horse — becomes
stronger than ever.
Comments
Post a Comment