Jodi Lees Dressage

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Super article on Second Level!
06/11/2026

Super article on Second Level!

**Understanding Second Level Dressage: Where Strength Meets Collection**

Second Level is often called the "make or break" level in dressage, and for good reason.

Up to this point, much of the training has focused on developing rhythm, relaxation, connection, and basic straightness. The horse has learned to move willingly forward into the contact and respond to the rider's aids.

Now the conversation changes.

Second Level is where we begin asking the horse not just to push from behind, but to start carrying from behind.

This distinction is critical.

Many riders mistake collection for a slower tempo or a shorter stride. In reality, true collection is the result of increased strength, balance, and engagement. The horse lowers the croup, lightens the forehand, and begins transferring more weight onto the hindquarters while maintaining energy, activity, and elasticity throughout the body.

This is why the movements introduced at Second Level are so important.

Shoulder-in teaches the horse to step further underneath its body and improve alignment.

Travers and renvers increase suppleness while encouraging greater carrying power from the inside hind leg.

Medium gaits test whether the horse can lengthen the frame and stride without losing balance or connection.

Simple changes reveal the quality of the canter, the horse's adjustability, and the rider's ability to maintain balance through transitions.

Every movement serves a purpose. None exist simply to earn points in a test.

They are gymnastic exercises designed to strengthen the horse for the work that lies ahead.

One of the most common challenges riders encounter at this level is confusing collection with restriction. When horses are asked to "collect" before they have the strength to carry themselves, they often become tense, lose activity behind, shorten the neck, drop behind the leg, or feel stuck in the bridle.

The answer is rarely more hand.

The answer is usually better engagement, improved balance, and continued development of the hindquarters.

So how do we begin collection without restriction?

Collection starts with creating more energy, not less. The rider asks the hind legs to become quicker, more active, and more engaged. Then, through well-timed half halts, that energy is recycled back toward the hindquarters rather than allowed to run onto the forehand.

The horse should feel as though the stride is becoming more powerful underneath you, not smaller in front of you.

Think about riding the hind legs toward a receiving seat and elastic contact rather than pulling the front end shorter.

A good early collected stride still feels forward. The neck remains supple, the back stays swinging, and the horse remains willing to move into the contact. If the horse loses impulsion, becomes tight through the topline, or feels trapped between the hand and leg, collection has likely turned into restriction.

This is why transitions within the gait, transitions between gaits, shoulder-in, and counter canter are often some of the best tools for developing collection. They strengthen the carrying power of the hindquarters while teaching the horse to rebalance itself without relying on the rider's hand.

The best Second Level horses still feel like they want to go forward. They simply become more adjustable. They can lengthen and shorten their stride, shift their balance, and stay in self-carriage without relying on the rider to hold them together.

Second Level isn't about performing advanced movements.

It's about building the strength, coordination, and understanding necessary for true collection.

Because the collection seen at Third, Fourth, and FEI levels isn't created overnight.

It's built one correct transition, one shoulder-in, one half halt, and one balanced stride at a time.

This.
05/29/2026

This.

05/25/2026

Look at these scores!!!!!!!

05/23/2026

Thank you to Liz Bromberg for sharing this:

Stewart Brand cites the following quote in his book, The Maintenance of Everything. The book is not about horses; but this quote explains so much.

�”You cannot remain unmoved by the gentleness and conformation of a well-bred and well-trained horse �— more than a thousand pounds of big-boned, well-muscled animal, slick of coat and sweet of smell, obedient and mannerly, and yet forever a menace with its innocent power and ineradicable inclination to seek refuge in flight, and always a burden with its need to be fed, wormed and shod, and its liability to cuts and infections, to laming and heaves. But when it greets you with a nicker, nuzzles your chest, and regards you with a large and liquid eye, the question of where you want to be and what you want to do has been answered.�”
�Albert Borgmann, Crossing the Postmodern Divide, 1992

EXPLORING HOW TO HANDLE UNEXPECTED MOMENTS IN THE SHOW RINGEven in the most prepared rides, unexpected moments can arise...
05/19/2026

EXPLORING HOW TO HANDLE UNEXPECTED MOMENTS IN THE SHOW RING

Even in the most prepared rides, unexpected moments can arise in the show ring. This class explores how those situations are viewed and addressed from a judging perspective.

Join ‘S’ Judge Jodi Lees for an educational session featuring real video examples of errors, ring issues, and unexpected situations seen in the show ring, along with discussion on evaluation, rules, and practical decision-making.

May 26th at 7:00pm ET
Approximately 90 minutes
This session will be recorded.

More details and registration: https://www.chloerothdressage.com/courses

I like to see and hear different imagery - everyone learns in different ways and sometimes an image or description sudde...
05/19/2026

I like to see and hear different imagery - everyone learns in different ways and sometimes an image or description suddenly turns the light bulb on!

🐴 DRESSAGE SOLUTIONS: Improve Quality of Contact🐴

To help improve the quality of your contact and the connection with your horse …

Imagine that the dynamics of contact are similar to that of sailing a boat. The wind (impulsion and energy) is essential and you use the sails (reins) to harness the wind. You sail forward (and connect the horse from back to front). The goal is to achieve self-carriage with silent aids.
— Bruno Greber

🎨 Illustration by Sandy Rabinowitz

I taught an L Education Program C Session for NCDCTA this past weekend at Averett College. It was a good group of partic...
05/18/2026

I taught an L Education Program C Session for NCDCTA this past weekend at Averett College. It was a good group of participants that just kept rising to the occasion and really got a solid grip on the material! Many thanks to Stacey Quaranta for organizing, to the Averett College Equestrian Team for volunteering, to all of the demo riders and horses and to North Carolina Dressage & Combined Training Association for putting this program together.

This past weekend I taught  an L Education Program Session C in Creswell, Oregon organized by Laura Frederiksen-Park and...
05/12/2026

This past weekend I taught an L Education Program Session C in Creswell, Oregon organized by Laura Frederiksen-Park and the Oregon Dressage Society. There were 31 Participants and a good number of auditors. This was an interactive group that was really on top of its game! The group made me excited for the talent of future judges coming into the pipeline 😊
Thanks to Laura and Emily, everything was organized beautifully, the food was delicious, the demo riders were just awesome and Silver Tail Farm was a stunning venue.

EXPLORING HOW TO HANDLE UNEXPECTED  MOMENTS IN THE SHOW RING:RETURNING ONLINE CLASS for judges, aspiring judges, and int...
05/06/2026

EXPLORING HOW TO HANDLE UNEXPECTED MOMENTS IN THE SHOW RING:

RETURNING ONLINE CLASS for judges, aspiring judges, and interested riders!

When the unexpected happens in the show ring, understanding how to respond matters.

Join ‘S’ Judge Jodi Lees as she reviews NEW real video examples of errors, ring issues, and unexpected situations, while discussing how these moments are evaluated and handled from a judging perspective.

The class will be held on May 26th at 7:00pm ET and will run for approximately 90 minutes. This session will be recorded.

Click here for more details and to sign up: https://www.chloerothdressage.com/courses

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