Straton Sporthorses

Straton Sporthorses Katie Straton is a USDF Silver and Bronze medalist offering classical dressage training and lessons.

05/30/2026

One of the biggest shifts between simply “riding the test” and consistently scoring 70%+ is understanding what the judges are truly looking for. Let's use First Level.

It is not about flashy movement or forcing the horse into a frame.

It is about correct basics: balance, harmony, and rideability.

At First Level, judges want to see that the horse is beginning to carry more weight behind, stay connected from back to front, and maintain balance through transitions and lateral work.

They are looking for:

✔ pure, consistent rhythm
✔ relaxation and suppleness
✔ steady elastic contact
✔ straightness and correct bend
✔ balanced transitions
✔ engagement from the hindquarters
✔ accuracy in geometry
✔ adjustability within the gait

One of the most overlooked parts of scoring well is actually reading the directives on the scoresheet — not just memorizing the pattern.

The pattern tells you WHERE to go.

The directives tell you WHAT the judge is evaluating.

For example, movements may specifically ask for:
▪️balance
▪️quality of transition
▪️bend
▪️straightness
▪️regularity
▪️engagement
▪️submission
▪️accuracy

Riders consistently scoring well are usually thinking:
“How do I show the qualities the directive is asking for?”

—not simply—
“How do I get from one letter to the next?”

The directives are essentially the judge’s checklist.
They tell you exactly where the points come from.

The ideal frame is not created by pulling the head in.

A horse that is truly “together” should:
▪️lift through the withers
▪️swing through the back
▪️step actively underneath with the hind legs
▪️seek the contact forward
▪️stay light and elastic in the rider’s hand

The poll is generally the highest point, with the nose close to or slightly in front of the vertical — but the frame itself should be the RESULT of balance and connection, not something manufactured by the reins.

A horse can look round without actually being connected biomechanically.

True connection comes from:
hind leg → swinging back → elastic contact.

If you want to ride for 70%+, focus on making the basics exceptional:

• ride accurate geometry
• prepare transitions early
• maintain consistent rhythm
• keep the horse mentally relaxed
• ride every corner intentionally
• prioritize balance over flashiness
• create impulsion without rushing

Many scores are won or lost in the “simple” things:
the halt, the free walk, the centerline, transitions, circles, and straightness.

The best 70% tests usually do not look dramatic.
They look organized, supple, balanced, and harmonious.

Correct basics always scale upward into higher level work and your move up to Second Level and beyond.
Without them, the rest eventually falls apart.

A great start to Maybelline’s show career!Daily Dose Equine LLCTrilogy Performance SaddleryCourtney Peiffer - Trilogy Sa...
04/19/2026

A great start to Maybelline’s show career!
Daily Dose Equine LLC
Trilogy Performance Saddlery
Courtney Peiffer - Trilogy Saddles
The Distinguished Rider

04/17/2026

In 2019, the USDF issued a revision to the Dressage Training Pyramid, changing “relaxation” to “suppleness," Brenner Klenzman writes. The pyramid is a translation from the original German, where the word in question is Losgelassenheit, a term that does not directly translate to “suppleness.”

I majored in German in college, studied in Graz, Austria, and am a “new” rider, having started in my fifties. As I learn more about how to ride, this incorrect translation made me wonder: Have we in the U.S. gotten off track with the overall intent of the pyramid? Did we translate it incorrectly, and then revise that translation in a way that moved us even further from the original meaning?

Losgelassenheit literally translates to “being in a state of having let go.”

- Losgelassen is the past tense of loslassen, meaning “to let go.”
- The suffix -heit means “a state or condition of being.”
- The entire word literally means “being in a state or condition of having let go.”

Does this sound like “relaxed”? It actually feels closer to “relaxed” than “supple,” but even “relaxed” isn’t quite right. It describes a mental state of non-grasping, of letting go. It’s the absence of external anxiety, a state in which learning and performance can happen freely.

What stands out when comparing the correct translation of Losgelassenheit with “suppleness”? The original meaning is psychological, not physical. “Relaxation” was closer to the intended meaning, while “suppleness” moves even further away. “Supple” is purely physical.

The purpose of the pyramid, as described in German, is:

Basis der Skala ist die Zwanglosigkeit – die physische und psychische Entspannung –, die in jedem Stand der Ausbildung erhalten bleiben muss, um die volle Leistungsbereitschaft und Leistungsfähigkeit des Pferdes zu erhalten. Ein Verlust der Zwanglosigkeit hat meist auch einen Verlust des Taktes, immer den Verlust der Losgelassenheit zur Folge.

This translates to:

The basis of the scale is Zwanglosigkeit (freedom from tension)—both physical and mental—which must be maintained at every stage of training in order to preserve the horse’s full willingness and ability to perform. A loss of Zwanglosigkeit usually results in a loss of rhythm and always results in a loss of Losgelassenheit.

A literal breakdown of Zwanglosigkeit is also informative:

Zwang: force, compulsion, coercion
-los: without
-keit: state or condition of being
Zwanglosigkeit describes a state free from force, compulsion, or coercion.

While the USDF interpretation of the scale leans heavily toward the physical, the original intent clearly carries a psychological component. Looking more closely at the first three steps of the scale reveals a very different, and arguably more complete and humane, understanding of the pyramid.

📎 Continue reading this article at https://www.theplaidhorse.com/2026/04/16/what-losgelassenheit-really-means-and-why-it-matters-for-the-training-pyramid/
📸 © Olivia Danielle Photography

03/06/2026

When a horse is obedient but robotic or dull, he's learned he has no voice.

Rather than striving for obedience at all costs, classical training asks us to listen first, to hear what the horse is trying to tell us. That's what creates real harmony - when your horse feels heard, when he knows his input matters.

A willing partnership means the horse is a presence you're attuned to, someone you're in conversation with.

When your horse feels heard and valued, he's not waiting for your next demand. He's anticipating, responding, meeting you halfway. His ears are soft. His jaw is relaxed. He's thinking with you, not just responding to you.

This month, make an effort to listen first. The harmony you're looking for starts there.

If you take care of horses, this is a good read. I always say you must be vigilant and pay close attention to details. T...
02/14/2026

If you take care of horses, this is a good read. I always say you must be vigilant and pay close attention to details. That doesn’t come naturally for everyone, but it can be learned and practiced. “Noticing it early gives you options. Ignoring it until tomorrow gives you problems.” Being present, being aware, and following a system are skills that make the difference between basic horse care and excellent horse care.

Situational Awareness
I’m going to say this the same way I used to say it to new deputies riding with me: situational awareness isn’t a “nice extra.” It’s not a personality trait. It’s not a vibe. It’s a skill, and it’s a survival skill. Back then, it could mean the difference between me going home or somebody else having to make a phone call they never wanted to make. And even though I’ve been out of law enforcement for a few years now, that skill didn’t just switch off like a light. I still walk into a restaurant, and I’m automatically reading the room. I notice what doesn’t fit. I notice the person who’s watching too hard. I notice the table that’s too close to the door and the guy who keeps checking it. I notice the energy. My wife can see it on me before I ever say a word. She’ll look at my face, and she already knows, “Something is making you uncomfortable.” Most of the time, I’m not being dramatic. I’m just processing information that other people don’t even register.

And here’s what a lot of horse people don’t realize: the same kind of awareness that keeps you safe around people can keep your horse alive.

That’s not an exaggeration.

When I went from field training officer to full-time horse trainer, I didn’t leave that part of me behind. It came with me. It shaped how I work. It shaped how I see. It shaped what I catch early—before it becomes a wreck. Because in horses, the difference between “no big deal” and “emergency” is often nothing more than time, minutes, or hours. One feeding. One missed clue that was sitting right in front of you.

Most problems in horses don’t start as explosions. They start as whispers.

A horse doesn’t usually go from “fine” to “crashing colic” in a single frame like a movie. A horse doesn’t usually go from “sound” to “three-legged lame” without a bunch of little changes leading up to it—changes that are easy to miss if you’re walking through the barn on autopilot. And that’s the part I want to fix in owners, because I want your horse to stay alive and stay healthy. Because I want you to catch the whisper and not have to deal with the scream.

In law enforcement, situational awareness meant I was always scanning: people, exits, hands, body language, what’s normal, what’s not, what changed since the last time I was here. In the horse world, it’s the same process. Different environment, different threats. But the mindset is identical.

The barn is a “scene.” The pasture is a “scene.” The feed room is a “scene.” Your horse is a “scene.” And if you want to be a good horseman—if you want to be the kind of owner who prevents problems instead of reacting to disasters—you need to learn how to read the scene.

I’m going to make this practical.

Situational awareness in the barn means you notice what’s “off” before it becomes obvious

Routine is one of the biggest early-warning systems you have. If your horse normally nickers at feed time, and today he doesn’t? That matters. If she usually meets you at the gate, and today she doesn’t? That matters. If a horse usually finishes feed, and today there’s a half-inch left? That matters. If the manure count is different, if the stall looks different, if the bedding is disturbed in a weird pattern, if the horse’s coat looks duller, if the eyes don’t look right—those are all pieces of a puzzle.e..
That’s not “just a bucket.” That’s a data point. If it’s too full, your horse might not be drinking. If it’s too empty, your horse might be drinking more than normal, or the bucket might be leaking, or the horse might be playing in it, or another horse might be stealing it, or the weather might be changing consumption. Any one of those could matter. Noticing it early gives you options. Ignoring it until tomorrow gives you problems.

A horse hanging out in an odd place.
Horses are routine animals. They have habits. They have preferred spots. They have social patterns. When a horse is standing away from the herd, or standing with their head in the corner, or not coming up to the gate like they always do, or they’re parked in the shade when it’s cold, or standing in the sun when it’s hot—those little choices can be clues. Pain changes behavior. Discomfort changes behavior. Early sickness changes behavior. Herd dynamics change behavior. If you’re paying attention, you catch the change while it’s still small.

A horse out of routine.
This is what I mean when I tell my help to go look at something because something seems off. Sometimes they go look, and they don’t see it. That’s not because they’re dumb. It’s because situational awareness is trained. It’s built over years. You don’t get it by “being around horses.” You get it by practicing noticing and then checking your noticing against reality.bedding is disturbed in a weird pattern, if the horse’s coat looks duller, if the eyes don’t look right—those are all pieces of a puzzle.

A feed scoop not where it goes.
That sounds silly until you’ve lived long enough to know that “silly” is how accidents happen. Maybe someone changed something. Maybe a new helper did chores differently. Maybe the wrong grain got used. Maybe a supplement was missed. Maybe a horse got double-fed. Maybe a lid got left off. Maybe a rodent got into the feed. Situational awareness isn’t paranoia. It’s noticing small changes that have big consequences.

This is what I mean when I tell my help to go look at something because something seems off. Sometimes they go look and they don’t see it. That’s not because they’re dumb. It’s because situational awareness is trained. It’s built over years. You don’t get it by “being around horses.” You get it by practicing noticing and then checking your noticing against reality.

In my law enforcement days, new officers missed things all the time. Not because they didn’t care—because their brain wasn’t trained to sort the important from the background noise. The barn is the same way. Most owners see the big obvious stuff. They miss the quiet details.

Every time you walk into the barn, do the same mental scan in the same order. Water. Feed. Manure. Posture. Eyes. Legs. Environment. Routine. It takes two minutes once it becomes a habit.ally see their horse. They see a shape in a stall, not a living system giving them feedback.dback.k.om the herd. If you catch that early, you can intervene early. You can call the vet sooner. You can walk, monitor, check vitals, adjust feed, check water, check manure. If you don’t notice until the horse is down and thrashing, you’ve lost time you can’t buy back.

In law enforcement, I taught rookies to watch hands. To watch posture. To watch where someone’s eyes go. To watch how people position themselves relative to exits and others. In horses, I’m watching a different set of indicators—but the concept is identical.

Here are some of the “tells” that experienced horse people see without even thinking:

Posture changes: a horse standing camped out, a horse resting a leg differently, a horse shifting weight, a horse with a tight back, a horse standing stretched out like they’re trying to ease belly pressure.

Expression changes: dull eyes, worried eyes, tight muzzle, pinned ears that don’t match the situation, a different look than yesterday.

Movement changes: shorter stride, toe dragging, reluctance to turn, reluctance to back, stiffness that doesn’t warm out the way it normally does.

Behavior changes: not finishing feed, not coming to the gate, more reactive than normal, unusually quiet, unusually “clingy,” unusually aggressive.

Environment changes: broken fence board, a gate chain unhooked, a water heater unplugged, a new object near the gate that wasn’t there yesterday, a patch of ice, a slick spot, a mud hole that grew overnight.

None of those things alone automatically means “emergency.” That’s important. Situational awareness doesn’t mean you panic every time something is different. It means you notice it, log it mentally, and follow up with a calm, systematic check.

That’s what good cops do. That’s what good horsemen do.

Situational awareness is how you stop small problems from becoming expensive problems

Let me give you a few real-world examples of how this plays out, because owners need to understand the stakes.

Example 1: Early colic signs
A horse that’s starting to feel gut discomfort might not be violently rolling yet. Early on, they might just stand a little different. They might not finish grain. They might drink less. They might look at their side. They might not want to move. They might be away from the herd. If you catch that early, you can intervene early. You can call the vet sooner. You can walk, monitor, check vitals, adjust feed, check water, check manure. If you don’t notice until the horse is down and thrashing, you’ve lost time you can’t buy back.

Example 2: Injury before it becomes a blown-up leg
A horse might have a small cut or a tiny puncture that doesn’t look like much at first. But if that leg starts to swell and heat builds, it turns into a much bigger deal. If you notice the horse standing oddly or not moving normally, you can find it early—clean it, monitor it, treat it, and avoid complications. If you miss it for a day because you weren’t paying attention, now it’s a swollen mess and you’re behind.

Example 3: Dehydration and water issues
A horse not drinking enough can look “fine” until they aren’t. That’s why the water bucket matters. That’s why the trough matters. That’s why noticing “too full” matters. It’s not you being picky. It’s you catching the kind of thing that causes impaction colic and performance issues and general misery.

Example 4: Feed mistakes and routine mistakes
People roll their eyes about feed room organization until the day a horse gets the wrong grain or a double dose of something that didn’t need doubled. Organization is not aesthetics. It’s safety. Just like on patrol, the little routines keep you from making big mistakes when you’re tired, rushed, or distracted.

The difference between “aware” and “unaware” is usually the difference between proactive and reactive

A lot of owners live reactive. They don’t mean to. They just do. They show up, do chores, throw hay, scroll their phone, leave. They see their horse every day but they don’t actually see their horse. They see a shape in a stall, not a living system giving them feedback.

Situational awareness turns you into a proactive owner. It’s the habit of constantly, quietly asking:

What’s normal for this horse?

What’s different today?

What changed in the environment?

What changed in routine?

What’s the simplest explanation?

What’s the worst-case explanation?

What can I check right now that gives me useful information?

And here’s the part I really want to underline: you don’t need to be dramatic. You don’t need to be anxious. You just need to be disciplined.

How I recommend owners build this skill on purpose

If I was training you like a rookie officer, I wouldn’t just tell you “be aware.” I’d give you a system. So here’s a barn version of that.

1) Build a baseline—know what “normal” looks like
You can’t notice “off” if you don’t know “normal.” Learn your horse’s normal water intake, normal manure output, normal feed behavior, normal herd position, normal attitude, normal movement out of the stall. Most owners don’t know these things until something goes wrong. Flip that.

2) Use a consistent scan every time
Every time you walk into the barn, do the same mental scan in the same order. Water. Feed. Manure. Posture. Eyes. Legs. Environment. Routine. It takes two minutes once it becomes habit.

3) When something feels off, don’t argue with yourself—verify
This is where people fail. They feel something and then talk themselves out of it because they don’t want to be “that person.” I’d rather you be “that person” than be the person who missed the early signs. If something seems off, check vitals. Watch the horse move. Check the bucket. Put hands on legs. Look at gums. Count breaths. You don’t have to jump to conclusions, but you do need to confirm reality.

4) Teach everyone around you to see the same way
Your help, your kids, your spouse—whoever does chores—needs the same standard. If you’re the only one with awareness, you become the bottleneck. This is exactly why I used to “send them to look” and then go show them what they missed. That’s training. That’s building their eyes. Don’t just correct them—teach them what to look for next time.

5) Keep a simple log when you need to
If a horse is borderline or you’re monitoring a potential issue, write down water, manure, temp, appetite, attitude. You’d be amazed how fast patterns show up when you stop relying on memory.

I learned situational awareness for my survival. I use it now for my horse’s survival.

That’s the core of this whole idea. In law enforcement, my brain learned to pay attention because the price of missing something could be catastrophic. In horse ownership, the price is different—but it’s still real. Horses don’t get to tell you what hurts with words. They tell you with behavior. They tell you with routine changes. They tell you with the quiet little stuff that most people ignore.

If you want to be the kind of horse owner who keeps your horse safer, healthier, and more comfortable, I’m telling you the truth: develop your situational awareness like your horse’s life depends on it—because sometimes it does.

I’m not asking you to be paranoid. I’m asking you to be present. I’m asking you to stop walking through the barn like a tourist and start walking through it like someone responsible for a living animal that can’t speak for itself.

Notice the bucket. Notice the feed. Notice where your horse stands. Notice what changed. Take a mental note. Follow up calmly. Catch the whisper.

That’s how you prevent the scream.

💯% own it!
02/09/2026

💯% own it!

🚨 Unpopular Opinion (but your dressage scores will thank you):
If you’re blaming the judge… it’s probably not the judge.

Here are 6 simple things most riders say they do but actually don’t and it’s costing you marks 👇

1️⃣ Transitions aren’t “good enough” just because they happened
Smooth, balanced, prompt transitions matter more than flashy movements. If your rhythm changes, so should your expectations.

2️⃣ Accuracy is free points… and people still leave them on the table
Wobbly centerlines, drifting circles, and “close enough” geometry? Judges see it all. Ride the test, not your feelings.

3️⃣ Forward ≠ fast
Impulsion comes from engaged hind legs and real connection, not rushing. If the contact isn’t honest, the movement won’t be either.

4️⃣ Your position matters more than you think
A crooked rider creates a crooked horse. Strong core, quiet seat, clear aids, not constant micromanaging.

5️⃣ Presentation influences first impressions (yes, it does)
A polished horse, tidy turnout, and confident riding sets the tone before you even halt. It’s not superficial, it’s part of the sport.

6️⃣ Reflection beats excuses every time
Talk to your trainer, coach, or barn friend. Not every test will go to plan but avoiding honest feedback guarantees nothing changes next time.

💬 Hot take: Most riders don’t need harder movements… they need better basics.

Agree? Disagree?
Tell me which one you’re working on, or which one you think judges overvalue 👇

Source of image: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impulsion

Dreaming of sunshine and warmer weather 😎Shoutout to our sponsors for keeping us looking and performing our best!The Dis...
02/01/2026

Dreaming of sunshine and warmer weather 😎

Shoutout to our sponsors for keeping us looking and performing our best!
The Distinguished Rider
Trilogy Performance Saddlery
Courtney Peiffer - Trilogy Saddles
Daily Dose Equine LLC & The Healthy Horse & Pet

📸Karrie Dash Photography

Straton Sporthorses has one training stall available at our private facility in Gettysburg, PA. We are looking for a lon...
01/18/2026

Straton Sporthorses has one training stall available at our private facility in Gettysburg, PA. We are looking for a long-term addition to our wonderful group of horses and clients. Our small family-friendly barn offers personalized care and customized training programs in a quiet and relaxed environment.

Katie is a USDF Bronze and Silver medalist who loves helping horses and riders of all levels and backgrounds develop in harmony through classical dressage principles. Her empathetic and patient approach prioritizes the well-being of the horse, and focuses on correct basics, rider equitation, and understanding of riding theory.

Contact Katie Straton for more details about this opportunity and how we can help you with your 2026 goals!

We had a great time at Dressage At Devon, and how fun to be there for the 50th Anniversary!Daily Dose Equine LLC & The H...
10/08/2025

We had a great time at Dressage At Devon, and how fun to be there for the 50th Anniversary!

Daily Dose Equine LLC & The Healthy Horse & Pet
Trilogy Performance Saddlery
Courtney Peiffer - Trilogy Saddles
The Distinguished Rider

📷 Purple Horse Designs & Photography

10/02/2025

You can’t force it, or fake it. You just have to show up, every single day and keep chopping the wood.

The most meaningful part of training horses isn’t the big wins or the picture-perfect moments.

It’s the quiet work, the everyday moments where a horse chooses to trust you a little more. When they soften, when they breathe, when they realize you’re not going to rush them and you're in this together. That’s when the magic happens.

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Frederick, MD
21702

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