Fiona Price
27 Sep 2009 22:20
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Catrin,
I have consulted with one of Horse Hero's dressage experts and can answer this:
Re UK dressage levels, affiliated dressage is governed by British Dressage (www.britishdressage.co.uk) which is similar in set-up to the USDF.
The various levels in increasing order of difficulty are (new movements introduced at that level shown in brackets):
Intro – (walk & trot tests) Prelim – (working trot & canter) Novice – (medium walk, trot & canter, counter canter ,rein back) Elementary – (leg yield, collected trot & canter, simple changes) Medium – (shoulder-in, half pass, extended & collected walk, extended trot & canter, travers, half walk pirouettes, Advanced Medium – (flying change) Advanced (4 times changes) Prix St Georges Intermediare I Intermediare II Grand Prix
A little bit about how our classes are divided: We don’t split classes by amateur/professional status, instead we have a system of horse & rider ranking. Horses accumulate points as they do well in competition & once they reach a certain level are upgraded & are no longer allowed to compete at a level. This stops a Prix-St-George horse from being able to contend an elementary class.
Riders are given a group level, entitling them to compete in the Open or Restricted section at a particular class level. Once a rider has experience in the level above, they must compete in the Open section of lower levels.
To compare, the US system (explained in Lauren Sprieser's blog):
Intro - walk/trot Training Level - walk, trot, canter First Level - walk, trot, canter, lengthening trot & canter, leg yield, beginning of counter canter Second Level - collected trot & canter, medium trot & canter, shoulder in, travers, renvers, rein-back, simple changes, turn on haunches, counter canter Third Level - collected, medium, and extended gaits, half-pass, flying changes, plus the stuff from Second Level Fourth Level - basically same stuff as Third Level but higher degree of difficulty. Flying changes every 4th stride, canter half-pirouette.
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