Beth Armitage Horsemanship

Beth Armitage Horsemanship Freelance trainer and coach, offering a horse centred approach to training. Based in North Yorkshire

14/06/2026
I love that Smokey feels as though he can express himself. I love even more that he knows when it’s appropriate and when...
12/06/2026

I love that Smokey feels as though he can express himself. I love even more that he knows when it’s appropriate and when it’s not.

Also, look how handsome he is 😍🥰

12/06/2026
11/06/2026

Pole work has become one of those generic prescriptions that gets thrown at almost every horse.

Weak back? Do pole work.
Needs more core? Do pole work.
Needs to lift the legs? Do pole work.
Rehabilitation? Add poles.

And I’m going to say the thing that probably needs saying.

Pole work is not a cure-all.

Putting poles on the ground does not automatically create back strength, core engagement, thoracic sling lift, better posture, or correct connection from the hind leg.

It can.

But only if the horse has the functional ability to use the exercise correctly.

If a horse is already weak, crooked, disconnected, braced, falling through the shoulder, hollowing the back, or compensating through the neck and limbs, then adding poles may not improve the movement pattern at all.

It may simply make the compensation more obvious.

You may see the legs lift higher.
You may see more action.
You may see the horse “try harder.”

But limb lift is not the same as thoracic lift.

Stepping over a pole is not the same as lifting through the body.

A horse can pick the feet up over poles while still dropping through the chest, bracing through the back, loading the forehand, disconnecting the hind leg, and using tension to get the job done.

And this is where we have to be careful, especially in rehabilitation.

Because adding difficulty does not automatically create better function.

If the horse does not yet have the balance, alignment, strength, coordination, or postural control to navigate poles well, then pole work can become another layer of strain. Another task the horse has to survive. Another exercise where the body finds a way around the weakness rather than resolving it.

That does not mean pole work is bad.

It means pole work needs to be appropriate.

It needs to be chosen for that horse, in that body, at that stage, with a clear understanding of what you are trying to improve and what the horse is actually doing while they perform the exercise.

Are they lifting through the thoracic sling?

Is the back connecting?

Is the neck able to lengthen without collapsing?

Is the hind leg stepping through under the body, or is it just pushing the horse forward?

Is the horse becoming more balanced, more organised, more comfortable?

Or are they just getting over the poles?

Because those are not the same thing.

In rehabilitation, the goal is not to make the exercise look more impressive.

The goal is to improve the way the horse uses their body.

Sometimes that means poles are useful. Sometimes it means one pole is enough. Sometimes it means the horse needs better posture, better balance, better straightness, and better nervous system regulation before poles are even helpful.

More difficulty is not always more therapeutic.

Sometimes it is just more compensation.

And if we are going to use pole work to help horses, we need to stop treating it like a magic solution and start treating it like any other training tool.

Useful when it is understood.

Potentially harmful when it is prescribed without thought.

The question should never be, “Should I do pole work?”

The question should be, “Can my horse use this exercise in a way that improves their body, their balance, their comfort, and their soundness?”

Because that is where the value is.

Not in the poles.

In how the horse moves through them.





11/06/2026
10/06/2026

"The horse itself presents genuine head carriage when it is physically ready to do so.

It comes automatically when the horse's hindquarters become supple during training.

The hocks begin to take on load and go somewhat lower.

This causes the withers to elevate a little; the neck displays a graceful curvature of the mane crest and the poll bends of its own accord, so the horse's nose line becomes vertical or nearly vertical depending on the natural degrees of freedom of the throatlatch area."
- More than just riding: Being answerable to the horse, Petra Maurer

Gorgeous Olwen really starting to look like a grown up pony. We’ve really spent a lot of time working on helping Olwen t...
10/06/2026

Gorgeous Olwen really starting to look like a grown up pony.

We’ve really spent a lot of time working on helping Olwen to soften her extremely powerful Welsh Cob trot on the ground before taking it into her ridden work and the result has a been a lovely, balanced (for a recently started 5 year old) trot.

Shes really coming on in leaps and bounds now! 💕

I met little Winston today, 8 days old and ridiculously cute!
09/06/2026

I met little Winston today, 8 days old and ridiculously cute!

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Skipton

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+447896589675

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