Of course you can. If you have a good horse and know the test that you are going to ride, you just ride it and look at the results, you don't have to hear anything
Where you do not get points on British Dressage or you are not a member of BD and can still compete
ride it compete it jumping dressage cross country
Well yes and no. Every horse is capable of doing dressage, but not all are capable of doing it well enough to compete.
Dressage can be both a team or individual sport. When you compete on an individual level the points you earn only go towards your personal score but when you compete in theOlympicsthe points you earn go to a overall score whichdeterminesthe place which the team gets.Hope this helps :-)
Dressage! You just about defined dressage, within your question. If your horse possess these traits, whether you compete in Show Jumping or Endurance Racing, you will excel further.
show jumping or maybe dressage, something to do with horses
Yes. Riders in Western Pleasure, Equitation, and Dressage can compete in walk/trot classes.
Dressage made its debut in the 1900 summer Olympics in Paris, France. It then disappeared until 1912 but has featured in the Olympics ever since, although up until the 1952 games only military officers were aloud to compete.
Not really but you should stick to a training program as closely as possible. A rider can compete as long as they are able to ride. A horse should be brought along slowly to avoid problems later on. Classical dressage is more taxing on the horse and full training should not begin until the horse is 5 years old or older. 'Basic' Dressage can begin at age 3 years and progress from there until the horse is ready to retire.
All equestrian events (dressage, eventing, jumping) and mixed doubles badminton.
Horseback Riders can do various things.One of which is showjumping, or dressage, or cross countryOr if they do not compete then they can just hack out in the woods and have fun with their horse or pony
No dressage is not timed