What I have used is draw reins. For draw reins you need to be a very good rider so you dont miss use the draw reins. Also use lots of circles. I hope this helps! Feel free to ask me any more questions if you need help! :) Good luck!
Yes. Riders in Western Pleasure, Equitation, and Dressage can compete in walk/trot classes.
The difference between thw western trot and the English trot is simple. The western trot is called a jog, which is much slower than the English trot. The English trot is called a trot, which is much quicker than western jog. Also you are not suppose to post in a western saddle you only do that in an English.
The equivalent of a trot (in Western Riding) is called the jog. The differences are only verbal.
The pleasure trot is a medium working trot. The horse should be accepting of the bit with a good head-set, a free swinging shoulder and engaged hocks. Most of all, it should have a pleasing, ground-covering cadence.
Of course you can. But most Western riders use a sitting trot. But when you trot, make sure you are on the right diagonal. :)
The jog is generally a western movement. The english equivalent would be the trot, which is more forward-going than the western jog. Dressage at the high levels requires several types of trot: collected, working, and extended. Arguably the passage is also a very slow, animated trot.
the gaits of a non gaited horse include 4 major, and all together 7, including English style gaits, and western style gaits. the major ones are walk, trot, canter, gallop. the picky ones are (from slowest to fastest) walk, jog[western], sitting trot[in between kinda bumpy, but not bad], posting trot, lope[western], canter[English or all round], and gallop. usuall in a western style like western pleasure u wouldn't gallop, but u would do a very slow (depending on the horse), very comfortable (again depending) jog. so i guess ur answer is called a jog. any non-gaited horse can do it.
Probably a halter class, or, if riding, do a walk/trot pleasure class
A Western horse is used for Western events, such as roping, barrel racing, reining, cutting, pole bending, and others. These events usually evolved from ranch work. Almost any horse can be used for Western, but the most common tend to be Quarter Horses, Paints, and Appaloosas, the "stock" breeds. You can also show western pleasure which is a slow but a comfortable ride but are called different gaits. canter=lope trot=jog
The current rules for western pleasure is a western saddle with a horn and sturrups in a U shape not the other shape a completley different religion to the englidh saddle.
There is western riding (gaming, western pleasure) and English riding (dressage, jumpers, hunter jumper, Polo, and English pleasure).
Horses that are rode for pleasure are just that, Pleasure horses. This is not to be confused with English or Western pleasure show horses, they are two different things.