Tinderbox Sport Horses

Tinderbox Sport Horses

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Tinderbox Sport Horses offer schooling, competing and rehab livery. Clinics, camps and coaching too! We also offer schooling, selling and competition packages.

Tinderbox Sport Horses specialise in producing quality horses for sale. Private and group lessons also available.

TP Camperhire 09/07/2026

We’ve got our campervan socials up and running. It would be really appreciated if you would give them a like. ❤️

TP Camperhire Meet Kenji! Our fabulous campervan for hire. Super smart living with all the home comforts! Comfortably sleeps 3 - 4 if you know each other well!!
We aim to make your camping adventure stress free and fun! Lots of extras available on request.

08/07/2026

What else do you need on a hot day! Ponies and a water jump!! 💦💦
Very cute visitors today!!

Photos from Tinderbox Sport Horses's post 05/07/2026

Spring clean for Kenji today!! Had a play with all the extras we’ll offer. Not sure about my awning building skills!
Once we get the habitation check and gas cert done she’ll be ready to go!
Already got our first bookings so exciting times!!

02/07/2026

Sprocket is very excited that we have our first couple of bookings on the campervan 🥰. Photo shoot planned this Sunday so we can get going with publicising her. Drop me a message is you’d like to reserve her. She’s keen to get on the road and start exploring!

29/06/2026

This is a good explanation. Bit of Monday morning reading for everyone!!

Tell a beginner or intermediate rider to ride forward and nine times out of ten what you get is faster. The tempo quickens, the rhythm flattens out, the horse falls on the forehand, and suddenly the rider who was just told to go forward is now hanging on the reins trying to slow everything back down. Forward and fast sound like the same instruction until someone explains why they are not and most riders never get that explanation. Forward is not a speed, forward is an attitude. Until your students understand the difference, they will keep producing horses that rush when they want impulsion and pull when they want control. Here is what forward actually means...

- Forward means in front of the leg, not running from it.
A horse that is truly forward is attentive, responsive, and willing to go. It steps under with the hindquarters, carries energy through the back, and responds to the lightest possible leg aid without needing to be chased. That horse can be ridden at a slow collected walk and still be forward because forward is about the quality of the response and the energy in the stride, not the speed at which the feet are moving. A fast horse is a different animal entirely. A fast horse is running from the leg, falling on the forehand, losing its balance through corners, and requiring constant rein intervention to prevent it from accelerating out of control. That horse is not more forward than a slow horse. It is less balanced, less responsive, and less rideable.

- Impulsion is energy contained and directed, not energy unleashed.
The classical definition of impulsion is the desire to go forward combined with the ability to collect and direct that energy. It lives in the hindquarters - the hind legs stepping under the horse's center of gravity, pushing with power and elasticity. A horse with genuine impulsion feels like a coiled spring under the rider. The energy is there, it is contained, and it can be released into lengthening or collected back in an instant. A fast horse has speed but no coil as the energy has already escaped out the front end and there is nothing left to work with.

How to teach the difference in a lesson:
1. Start by asking your student to describe what they feel when the horse speeds up versus when the horse feels forward. Most riders cannot initially articulate the difference because they have not been given the vocabulary or the reference point to identify it so give them both. Ride a few transitions that allow the horse to rush and let them feel what that produces. Then half halt, rebalance, and ask for a forward transition that maintains the tempo while increasing the energy. Ask them what changed because the conversation that follows is more instructive than any correction from the rail.

2. Transitions are your most effective tool for developing genuine impulsion. Ride them constantly and ride them everywhere - walk to trot, trot to walk, on a circle, down the long side, before the corner, after the corner. Every upward transition asks the horse to step under and push rather than fall forward and scramble. Every downward transition asks it to sit and collect rather than brace and drag. A horse being ridden through frequent but quality transitions simply cannot sustain a rushing flat pace because the work demands too much from the hindquarters for the horse to coast on speed alone. The transitions help do the teaching for you.

3. Pole work also develops the distinction beautifully. A horse approaching a ground pole at a rushing flat trot will chip in or stumble because it has no ability to adjust. A horse with genuine impulsion and a rider who can half halt will make the distance every time because the energy is contained and manageable. The pole does not lie about the quality of what is coming at it.

4. The leg does not mean go faster, it means use your hindquarters.
This is the conceptual shift that changes everything for a developing rider. The leg is not a gas pedal. It is a communication tool that asks the horse to engage behind, step under, and carry. When a horse responds to the leg by speeding up rather than stepping under it has been trained, usually accidentally, to interpret leg as go faster rather than engage behind. Retraining that response takes consistent correct riding by using a half halt to rebalance the horse.

Teach your students to ride for energy not for speed and watch the quality of everything they do in the saddle transform.

How do you teach your students the difference between forward and fast?

27/06/2026

We’ve done it!!! Welcome to our new camper van we will be hiring out! Really pleased with her. Watch this space for details of how to book- but if you’re interested in coming to view her / letting us know when you’d like her - drop me a message!

11/06/2026

Big weekend for Widget. Her first stay away show! Fortunately she’s got two companions with a fair few miles between them!!! Big brother duties for George and Bellini 💪🥰

05/06/2026

The going is good to firm in the 3.30 maiden hurdle stakes here at the Tinderbox. Who’s your money on??

04/06/2026

Anyone free to help Saturday morning at Willlwbanks? 3 lovely easy horses and only jumping the first class.

Photos from German Riding Instructor's post 29/05/2026

Like this! Been seeing a lot of inside rein steering lately!! Nice little reminder. 👏👏

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Tina Canton. The Tinderbox, Beckingham Road, Coddington
Newark
NG242QU