Articles with Laine Ashker Archives - Practical Horseman https://practicalhorsemanmag.com/tag/articles-with-laine-ashker/ Thu, 28 Aug 2025 14:36:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://s3.amazonaws.com/wp-s3-practicalhorsemanmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/14150009/cropped-practical-horseman-fav-icon-32x32.png Articles with Laine Ashker Archives - Practical Horseman https://practicalhorsemanmag.com/tag/articles-with-laine-ashker/ 32 32 How Cross Country Translates to Upper-Level Dressage https://practicalhorsemanmag.com/featured-articles/how-cross-country-translates-to-upper-level-dressage/ Wed, 27 Aug 2025 13:46:08 +0000 https://practicalhorsemanmag.com/?p=30371 Eventers of all levels are well versed in riding over varying terrain due to their experience on cross country where they’re often required to ride down banks and navigate drop-downs into water and jumps with drops behind them. “This helps us learn how to put our position in the backseat when we need to,” five-star eventer and Grand Prix dressage rider Laine Ashker said. “Riding cross country teaches you how to naturally balance your horse, which carries over to dressage.”

Five-star eventer and Grand Prix dressage rider Laine Ashker says her experience riding cross country helps improve her upper-level dressage movements because both are all about finding balance in your horse.

Here, Ashker explains how her experience as a five-star eventer helps with her upper-level Grand Prix dressage movements and vice versa. You can also watch a video of her demonstrating this concept below.

From Drop Jumps to Pirouettes and Piaffe

“In eventing, especially when coming down to the head of a lake or dropping into water, you have to create balance in your horse. You can see in the video as I prepare for my left half pirouette turn, I stay behind my horse so he can more easily lift his shoulders for the turn. And then I ride him out. We repeat it one more time. I take my time and am very patient as I continue to stay behind him to keep his shoulders lifted.

“In piaffe, it’s the same idea. You want your horse’s shoulders to lift, not his head. There’s a big difference. And in order for the horse’s shoulders to lift, his back and rear need to drop. You horse can’t do this if you’re ahead of him all the time.

“Here, I’m going to demonstrate my position. You should always be able to draw a straight line from your shoulder to your hip and down to your heel. It’s very similar to our takeoffs over some cross-country jumps because it requires us to naturally balance our horses. The jumps actually help us do this. In dressage, we obviously don’t have jumps, so we have to use our position and posture to achieve that balance.

“In the piaffe, it’s a very light aid with the hand. Then, my legs alternate to ask my horse to lift his front legs. There’s a very fine line here between throwing him out of balance with my position. I continue to stay behind his motion to allow his shoulders to lift, and I might allow him to travel just a bit to keep the steps the same.

“In summary, if you do both eventing and upper-level dressage, be proud of being an eventer. Improving your position on cross country will only make your position that much better in your dressage work, no matter your level, and it will be more supportive for your horse.”

Click to watch the full video of Laine Ashker demonstrating how her experience on cross country as an eventer carries over to her upper-level Grand Prix dressage movements.

About Laine Ashker

Five-star eventer and dressage professional Lainey Ashker has competed in numerous FEI competitions at the five-star level, including the Blenheim Palace International Horse Trials CC14* and the Defender Burghley Horse Trials CC15*. The horsewoman, who trains out of her Keystone Acres farm in Chesterfield, Virginia, also won the National Eventing Championship (Advanced Level) in 2013 aboard her long-time mount, Anthony Patch. More recently, she won her first CDI in May 2023 aboard her upper-level dressage horse, Zeppelin.

For more with Laine Ashker, click here.

This video is brought to you by Absorbine.

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Laine Ashker’s Secrets for Lustrous Locks and Show-Day Shine https://practicalhorsemanmag.com/health/laine-ashkers-secrets-for-lustrous-locks-and-show-day-shine/ Thu, 31 Jul 2025 15:26:44 +0000 https://practicalhorsemanmag.com/?p=30125 Over the course her eventing career, Laine Ashker has learned that keeping her horses’ manes, tails and coats in pristine condition requires daily attention, quality nutrition and a diligent grooming routine that includes smart use of shine-enhancing sprays. This consistent care keeps her horses’ coats and tails healthier overall and is crucial for achieving that horse-show glow.

“Everyone knows ShowSheen. It’s across all disciplines and is in everyone’s tack trunk because it’s great for shine and detangling,” she noted. “But I wanted to provide you with a little tidbit that I learned from a top five-star eventing groom.”

Tail care is a must at Ashker’s barn, and to get the best effect, she thoroughly sprays her horses’ tails with ShowSheen. Then, starting from the bottom, she uses her fingers to work the product into the hair all the way up to the dock and allows it to dry before brushing.

“This activates the detangling portion of the product, so that when you do go to brush out your horse’s tail, you won’t break any hair, which can eventually make the tail look thin and sparse,” she said. “This horse specifically has a fake tail, so I really want to avoid pulling or breaking those hairs, too. I also use the same treatment on my horses’ manes because of the great detangling effect it has on the individual hairs.”

In addition to using ShowSheen keep her horse’s manes and tails glowing and tangle-free, Ashker also applies it to her horses’ coats to bring out extra shine for the show ring. “I apply it to their coats when they’re still a little wet,” she said. “I think of it like a leave-in conditioner when you’re coming out of the shower, and it really creates that nice shine.”

Watch Ashker’s video below to learn how you can use her tips to keep your horse’s mane, tail and coat healthy and shiny.

About Laine Ashker

Five-star eventer and dressage professional Lainey Ashker has competed in numerous FEI competitions at the five-star level, including the Blenheim Palace International Horse Trials CC14* and the Defender Burghley Horse Trials CC15*. The horsewoman, who trains out of her Keystone Acres farm in Chesterfield, Virginia, also won the National Eventing Championship (Advanced Level) in 2013 aboard her long-time mount, Anthony Patch. More recently, she won her first CDI in May 2023 aboard her upper-level dressage horse, Zeppelin.  

This video is brought to you by Absorbine.

For More:

  • Learn how to beat the bugs this summer with Laine Ashker’s top tips for fly control here.
  • Gallop a CCI3* cross-country course with Ashker in this high-velocity GoPro footage, where she shares her strategies for tackling each obstacle over the challenging track at Maryland’s Fair Hill here.

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Gallop a CCI3* Cross-Country Course With Laine Ashker https://practicalhorsemanmag.com/featured-articles/gallop-a-cci3-cross-country-course-with-laine-ashker/ Mon, 23 Jun 2025 18:35:16 +0000 https://practicalhorsemanmag.com/?p=29749 In this incredible GoPro footage, five-star eventer Laine Ashker takes us jump by jump through Ian Stark’s grueling CCI3* cross-country course at the 2024 MARS Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill aboard her Dutch Warmblood mare Love Dance.

Beginning with her strategy for leaving the start box, Ashker offers advice on how she approaches each obstacle and combination on the course and provides tips on how she ensures her mare has enough gas to tackle the course with ease. She also notes which tactics worked and which jumps didn’t go so well and how she handles those situations in real time.

Ride along with Laine Ashker and Love Dance as they navigate Ian Stark’s grueling CCI3* cross-country course at the 2024 MARS Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill. Watch the full GoPro video of Ashker’s ride below.

We’re sure you’ll have as much fun as we did galloping along with Ashker and Love Dance over Fair Hill’s intense cross-country track, including the infamous Maryland crab water jump, and we hope you gain some insights on how you can navigate similar obstacles on your next cross-country ride.

Ashker: Maintain Your Battery From the Start Box

“Going into this course, I was quite nervous for a number of reasons. My mare is a proper warmblood, so she doesn’t have a lot of blood, and this was by far the longest course she’s every done at about 10 minutes and the largest crowd she’s ever seen.

“Whether I’m doing Beginner Novice or the five-star level, I think of my horse as an iPhone battery from the moment I leave the start box. When I’m in the warm-up ring, the battery is charged to 100%. As I go through the course, there are going to be a few jumps that maybe aren’t so good and that brings our battery level down. So, my goal over each jump on cross country is to keep bringing that battery level back up, so that when I finish I’m back with 100%.

“On cross country, I enter the start box on a long rein to help keep my mare calm. Out of the box, my main goal is to set a good rhythm. When I was younger, I used to set the rhythm out too strong. Now, I think of starting like the slow tortoise and then finishing like the hare.

At the start box. Watch the full GoPro video of Ashker’s ride below.

“The third jump on course is extremely technical with a max table to a narrow brush. After the table, I ride a straight line to the narrow. My mare got her eye on it at the last second, but she didn’t really know to look for it, so I was pleased as punch that she jumped that great.

“I jumped into the second combination on course—the sunken road—quite strongly and she got surprised by it. You can see that I fall forward. But that’s where my orange theory came into play. I was able to sit back and stick it and then kind of give myself a whack in the bum to make sure I’m staying behind my horse and not getting ahead of her on questions that are as difficult as that.

“There were a lot of maxed-out tables with ditches under them on this course. My mare used to be bit spooky at ditches and wanted to pause. But we can’t be pausing over those big tables, I so give her reassuring leg and a big cluck to get over it. But as we do each one on the course, she gains more confidence.”

Ashker: Ramping Up the Difficulty With Water and the Coffin

“The first water jump is a table from water to water. When horses jump from water to water, they’re slower off the ground and slower to land. So, as a rider, it’s very important to stay behind your horse’s motion. You see that I stay back to encourage her to ride across.

“Next we have the gallop jumps. My goal is to ride these as smoothly and as rhythmically as possible, so she doesn’t have to work so hard to keep charging that phone battery up to 100%.

“Now, we’re approaching the most nerve-wracking combination in the coffin. You have a big jump coming in and then a big ditch going downhill, and then you have to pick the left or right side depending on your horse. I chose the left, so I really brought my mare back to an aggressive show-jumping speed, jumped in and then really pointed her for two strides out.

The dreaded coffin combination. Watch the full GoPro video of Ashker’s ride below.

“We couldn’t celebrate too much, because then we have the double corner to corner. She’s pretty good on corners, but she’s also never seen this many people, so I really wanted to get her attention on it, especially because, as you can see, it’s kind of hidden under a tree. I hit the flag with my knee, but that was totally fine. I was really happy with her honesty and for looking down the flags. As event riders, we train our horses to look for the flags.

“The terrain is part of what makes Fair Hill so difficult, so even though we have this stretch here where I can regain my breath and mental focus, we’re going uphill. And because she’s not a full-blood horse, I want to slowly build her confidence and stamina, so I don’t push her uphill. I let her pick the pace that she needs to go up it.”

Ashker: Navigating the Infamous Crab and Final Combination

“Next we have the most exciting water jump with a max-height drop into the water to a related distance to two narrows. You’ll see how I rock my mare back so I can be powerful going to the very big and very narrow crabby crab coming in. I give a little stick on her shoulder and stay back and widen my hands for the narrow. And her stride is so big that with the three jumps afterward, it’s like clockwork.

“When I see the ears start to move with the horse, it indicates to me that maybe she’s getting a little tired. So, as a rider, you need to pay attention and rate that. This sport really teaches you to listen to your horse.

The famous Maryland crab jump. Watch the full GoPro video of Ashker’s ride below.

“On the final combination, you can tell she’s really listening to me. I’m talking to her and she’s very focused. But she doesn’t feel labored. I’m not having to kick her to go. Horses need energy to go, but they also need just as much energy to collect. You can see here how I brought her back and we had a really good shot in, but I underestimated how big her stride is. It was supposed to be a four stride, but I got there on three-and-half. So I gave her a good pat because she definitely saved us on that one. But that’s what eventing is all about—a partnership. That’s what makes this sport so great is that you know your horse inside and out.

“I was really proud of how she answered each one of the questions and finished on that 100% battery. The partnership and bond you experience on cross country is why I love eventing so much. I’ve had this mare going on five years now, and I do a lot of the grooming work myself and spend time with her day in and day out doing trot sets and gallop sets and the icing and aftercare. That really creates the bond and the partnership.

“No matter what level of eventing you ride at, both horse and rider must be extremely fit. So much goes into taking care of the horses—their nutrition, skin and coat health, their internal health. But taking care of my health and fitness is also extremely important, because that enables me to better help my horses.”

Ride With Ashker and Love Dance

From this awesome GoPro view, gallop along with Ashker and Love Dance as they navigate the challenging CCI3* cross-country track at Fair Hill last October.

Click to watch!

About Laine Ashker

Five-star eventer and dressage professional Lainey Ashker has competed in numerous FEI competitions at the five-star level, including the Blenheim Palace International Horse Trials CC14* and the Defender Burghley Horse Trials CC15*. The horsewoman, who trains out of her Keystone Acres farm in Chesterfield, Virginia, also won the National Eventing Championship (Advanced Level) in 2013 aboard her long-time mount, Anthony Patch. More recently, she won her first CDI in May 2023 aboard her upper-level dressage horse, Zeppelin.

For more with Laine Ashker, click here.

  

This video is brought to you by Absorbine.

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