There is one thing you have left to try. You can try just walking away and see if she follows.
Look for the pink arrows. You can only go back to Canter Farm from Canter Downs.
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).
it may be because the bit is too strong, try swapping the bit and see if problems persist. Some horses prefer to canter with an extended neck (head down) but if she bucks when she does this, get her back checked or an experienced person to watch her. Free school her or lunge, to see if she does this without anybody on her back. (if she does still do it, then deffinatley get her back checked.) That's what i would do in my oppinion. PS- many ex racehorses canter with there heads low/necks streched, sometimes its to take pressure away so they can gain more speed. its not neccisarily a problem.
If your pony is in a canter, sit back in the saddle and try to get your butt to stay in the saddle. Use vocal commands first, say whoa. If the pony is still unresponsive, pull back on the reins.
sit deep into your saddle and lean back.pull back on the reins
Close your leg, hold your shoulders back, and sit down.
This is something you need to work up to. Be sure to do your warm-up at the walk and then the trot. At first canter your horse only a couple of minutes. Build up over several weeks so as not to injure or over-stress him. Remember that when you have finished the canter work to cool him down. His nostrils should not be flared and his flanks should not heave rapidly. You need to get his heart rate back to a slower speed. You may also use a liniment after his work out. It will make him feel good and its great for sore muscles.
Pretty simple, (personally I think its easier than a trot.) Its best to enter a canter at sitting trot. Put your heels back and sit down in the saddle. Its also best to bridge your reins in canter, but its great fun, really. GemsGems3 x
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.
it encourages the horse to strike off onto the correct lead. as the outside hind leg is the horse's first leg which it uses in canter it encourages them to use it.
this is how you get a horse to canter: do a half halt, holding that energy in her, turn her head to the rail, or fence, and say "canter" very loudly and kick and cluck. good luck! it is really fun to canter bareback, too You probably won't need to kick most horses. A small amount of pressure from your outside leg just behind the girth will tell a well-trained horse to canter. If you are asking for the caner and the horse refuses, first make sure there is nothing causing him pain (a vet can look at his back and hocks for problems) and that the saddle fits without pinching. A horse won't canter if he's in pain. Make sure you ask for the canter from a steady, forward-moving trot and if the horse still refused to canter, follow up with a tap from a whip until he gets the idea. Be careful not to pull back on the reins, as this will just confuse the horse
check its back you might be hurting it. you might be asking wrong. if u want to stop him from doing it keep riding through the bucking to teach him that it doesn't bother you so he doesn't do it anymore. a horse only bucks because he thinks that it will get him out of work.