Пікірлер
@InessaVolkova-jk6kr
@InessaVolkova-jk6kr 3 күн бұрын
Это лучший кюр современности. Какая красота, невозможно наглядеться. Просто обожаю вас.
@user-ze3hk6zj1i
@user-ze3hk6zj1i Жыл бұрын
Absolutely Magnificent to the bone!
@betageli6549
@betageli6549 Жыл бұрын
Mega mega mega 10 10 10 10 10 👏👏👏❤️❤️❤️
@nasus1401
@nasus1401 3 жыл бұрын
Immer wieder ein fantastischer Ritt, toller Reiter und Wahnsinnspferd! Eine Augenweide, das anzusehen und soviel harmonischer als bei den meisten Warmblut-Leuten.
@tchezanne
@tchezanne 3 жыл бұрын
This freestyle performance is the BEST in my heart !!! FUEGO XII, JUAN MANUEL and the music, pure DELIGHT !!!
@cristinadiazrebaque4972
@cristinadiazrebaque4972 4 жыл бұрын
Sin duda alguna....merecía un mejor puesto!! El mejor PRE. Gracias a Miguel Cardenas por darnos eternamente esta satisfacción de ver a nuestro caballo en lo más alto...que Dios te lo pague.
@pepiconesa7397
@pepiconesa7397 5 жыл бұрын
Fantástico!!
@ledyvaiper
@ledyvaiper 6 жыл бұрын
Il titolo della musica qualcuno lo sa?
@ndarkf
@ndarkf 6 жыл бұрын
mejor caballo del mundo¡
@MaritsView
@MaritsView 6 жыл бұрын
You know what always bothered me? These guys use a bridle with bit and spurs.. But l know they can do this in a bosal without spurs too.. Wish they wanted that for competition.
@eliskasmedkova4321
@eliskasmedkova4321 7 жыл бұрын
Amazing and beautiful. Best kur I ever seen. Fuego is such a powerfull horse, he love this and he is soo goog ( and PRE😍). And rider is so good too. They are perfect together and they enjoy the ride so much. And this people... best kur😍
@krisza.k.4745
@krisza.k.4745 7 жыл бұрын
Fei junior
@mariavila8088
@mariavila8088 7 жыл бұрын
Bin kein wirklich-er Fan von dieser Reiterei !-aber hier passt Pferd & Reiter zusammen sieht / fühlt sich nicht gequält an . Und tolle Musik hoffe er gibt in seinem Land den Pferden die es nicht so gut haben etwas ab.
@tinaclark6209
@tinaclark6209 7 жыл бұрын
que guapo! los dos!
@kikisalo8506
@kikisalo8506 7 жыл бұрын
man achten auf seine Beine und wie ich finde ist sein Sitz echt richtig super👌
@Hors3pur0
@Hors3pur0 7 жыл бұрын
OH POR DIOS... COMO PUEDE SER TAN AGIL ESE CABALLO???
@dermangoschaler182
@dermangoschaler182 7 жыл бұрын
wenn die Piaffe bei 2:36 keine 9,5 oder besser war....👌👌
@dermangoschaler182
@dermangoschaler182 7 жыл бұрын
und er hat noch nen richtigen Schritt!!!
@lennartczolbe3362
@lennartczolbe3362 6 жыл бұрын
Und mit das wichtigste er tritt deutlich unter in der Piaffe die meisten modern gezüchteten Pferde können das nicht, da die Vorderbeine immer länger gezüchtet werden. Ich weiß es ust lächerlich aber ich hatte bei dieser Kür hier eine Gänsehaut und Tränen in den Augen
@kalenderzeit
@kalenderzeit 8 жыл бұрын
im gottes willen wie hat das Pferd den Kopf eingeschnürt
@andersoncaroline5210
@andersoncaroline5210 8 жыл бұрын
LOOOOOOVE this !!!!!!! Great job Mr Munoz DIaz, wonderfull Fuego !! :D
@nitefox1343
@nitefox1343 8 жыл бұрын
SPECTACULAR athlete and communication. This is what people are after. BIG $$$ to be at that level. Horse and rider are one.
@Sabyems90
@Sabyems90 8 жыл бұрын
6:02 Wow how many dressage riders on this level do that to their horses? I would say none. <3 love it
@alsosusieq256
@alsosusieq256 8 жыл бұрын
I think this is one of Fuego's best tests I've seen. His natural gait is so upward due to his conformation, it's harder to get that elegant floating extension although he does well.
@MuNieKo_
@MuNieKo_ 8 жыл бұрын
E S P E C T A C U L A R
@mannyleigh2571
@mannyleigh2571 8 жыл бұрын
Now that horse and rider know how to move with the music!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@abdobshar5132
@abdobshar5132 8 жыл бұрын
جميل
@jamieduggan4297
@jamieduggan4297 8 жыл бұрын
i hope this horse is called the one from Road to El Dorado
@sofiagarciagarcia1329
@sofiagarciagarcia1329 8 жыл бұрын
VIIVAAAAAA
@sofiagarciagarcia1329
@sofiagarciagarcia1329 8 жыл бұрын
Este es el q representa a mi país Fuego XII De Cárdenas y Juan Manuel Muñoz
@teresahaugen3974
@teresahaugen3974 8 жыл бұрын
I would enjoy these a lot more if the horses had the freedom to move their heads...Their heads are held as if they're wearing check reins :(
@isabelgandarillas4497
@isabelgandarillas4497 8 жыл бұрын
fUEGO IS ALMOST A PERFECT MACHINE, BUT HIS LEGS ARE A LITTLE STIFF. pITTY
@spagnollisamuele5122
@spagnollisamuele5122 8 жыл бұрын
bellissimo
@NadineLynch10
@NadineLynch10 8 жыл бұрын
bad comment sorry guys..... the riders hands are moving far to much in this test, the one handed is good the beginning the horses head was swaying to much
@soniaalves8332
@soniaalves8332 9 жыл бұрын
Que belo cavalo.... Que linda música... fantástico cavaleiro
@isabelgandarillas7108
@isabelgandarillas7108 8 жыл бұрын
+sonia alves estoy de acuerdo
@elviraperrone5634
@elviraperrone5634 9 жыл бұрын
qualcuno sa dirmi il titolo del brano musicale usato??
@travfreak
@travfreak 9 жыл бұрын
THIS is Dressage <3
@Dirkvandejonker
@Dirkvandejonker 9 жыл бұрын
wow soo schön...wunderbares Paar...<3
@Seelenfrieden1
@Seelenfrieden1 9 жыл бұрын
Toll
@mypasofino26
@mypasofino26 9 жыл бұрын
que Guapo!
@pepiconesa7397
@pepiconesa7397 9 жыл бұрын
Baila con salero y totilas es com un militar
@sofiagarciagarcia1329
@sofiagarciagarcia1329 8 жыл бұрын
Si ya aunque Fuego XII tenga salero tiene menos q reunión q totumas y titulas sigue siendo el mejor del mundo de alta escuela doma clásica y funcionalidad y morfología
@sofiagarciagarcia1329
@sofiagarciagarcia1329 8 жыл бұрын
Totilas mas bien
@mariavila8088
@mariavila8088 9 жыл бұрын
Einfach Traumhaft , so locker und schön ,tolle Musik . Danke
@EarthREALTOR
@EarthREALTOR 9 жыл бұрын
Fantastic Musical Dressage exhibition!!!! For more on Musical Dressage watch the Hallmark movie- The Long Shot
@CatchLightAnne
@CatchLightAnne 9 жыл бұрын
My most-favorite kur anywhere/anytime and Rimfaxe96 - couldn't agree with you more, Thanks so much for sharing.
@Rimfaxe96
@Rimfaxe96 9 жыл бұрын
Wonderful. A shame that the judges prefer warmbloods though, this horse is moving a lot better than most warmbloods whose heads are held so tight they can't even move properly.
@helixcheerleader
@helixcheerleader 6 жыл бұрын
Your english is great, but this is an example of a spanish horse retaining ideal elevation (where many warmbloods in this competition do not, especially during a piaffe, many fall downwards on the forehand)... his back is rounded the entire time and his extension is ideal - forward reach while both his diagonals remain parallel. Many of the warmbloods snap their knees when reaching upwards then forward, they no longer are extending properly... many hollow backs also. I believe that's what the original commenter is referring to - that this horse is actually displaying correct dressage movement but the judges tend to reward instead flashy gaits in warmbloods who are not in fact working correctly per the fundamentals of dressage. Dressage should not be a discipline that is bred for as we are seeing now with more and more carriage horse blood visible in the hollow-backed, extended trot you see nowadays. There is no logic in rewarding a very far reaching but hollow-backed and hind-dragging animal over a horse with less front reach but correct hind engagement and a rounded back, after all...
@natalyaglushenkova6217
@natalyaglushenkova6217 Жыл бұрын
@@helixcheerleader Я с Вами полностью согласна.
@aragonia01
@aragonia01 7 ай бұрын
Pura Rasa Espaniola, or the Andalusian horse if you prefer, it is an Arabian/Berber half-blood horse, is more warm-blooded than any other German or Hanoverian
@BigLoveAliciaX333
@BigLoveAliciaX333 9 жыл бұрын
Fuego XII and his rider should be the flagship couple of the dressage sport NOT Totilas and his rider.
@isabelgandarillas4497
@isabelgandarillas4497 9 жыл бұрын
The other day I was looking for more information about this team: Juan M.M.D. and fuego and he told that he went for the Fuego proyect because he was an early winner, he can do anything. He has a lot of character, he said the horse is a bomb, so he has to expent a possible explotion, he has to be careful about that. He told for this competition the first day was about the spanish team so he watvh out for the hold tean, the second was the tecnhilcal day and this lesson was day n°3 and he went to enjoy fuego and himself because he knows about their potential, but he´s always prepare for the bomb to explote
@ElizabethDMadison
@ElizabethDMadison 9 жыл бұрын
Unreal
@emeraldsnow3713
@emeraldsnow3713 9 жыл бұрын
This is not rollkur The fei pictures can be found in the like. This is what rollkur is defined as since none of you ignorant peopl care to open a book Exaggerated flexion of a horse's poll and neck, although surely practiced in the past, became popularized (so to speak) in dressage in the 1980s when Nicole Uphoff of Germany used it as a training technique with her horse, Rembrandt. Riding the notoriously spooky gelding in what was then referred to as a "low, deep, and round" outline helped Uphoff to manage the horse, according to much of what was published at the time. Switching to a competition-acceptable outline or "frame," Uphoff piloted Rembrandt to back-to-back team and individual dressage gold medals at the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games and the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. Uphoff's methods, not surprisingly, were emulated by other dressage riders, both professional and amateur. The German champion Isabell Werth, who won a string of team and individual Olympic gold and silver medals from 1992 through 2000, reportedly schooled some mounts low, deep, and round. The rider whose name has become most closely associated with the method is the Dutch star Anky van Grunsven, Werth's chief rival in the 1900s and 2000s and who herself racked up a running string of team and individual dressage medals, ending with individual golds aboard Salinero in Athens 2004 and Hong Kong 2008. As the years progressed, some dressage enthusiasts became increasingly alarmed by what they viewed as an improper training technique that violated the principles of classical horsemanship. Allegedly less egregious when used by knowledgeable riders, "rollkur," as detractors dubbed it, could be downright harmful to horses when used by inexperienced riders, they asserted. In the mid-2000s the German veterinarian Dr. Gerd Heuschmann, working with German Olympic dressage champion Klaus Balkenhol, created headlines when they publicized the findings of Heuschmann's anatomical and biomechanical studies of hyperflexion. Heuschmann said that hyperflexion not only fails to develop the proper musculature for upper-level dressage, but the exaggerated flexion can also restrict the horse's airway. Heuschmann published a book, Tug of War: Classical Versus "Modern" Dressage, detailing his findings and arguing against the practice of hyperflexion. Before long, rollkur had gone from innovative training method to dressage dirty word. The change in public sentiment happened to coincide with the rise of the Internet and the social-media age, and as a result the practice and the practitioners found images of themselves posted online as dressage spectators and media alike snapped photos and shot video of riders apparently using hyperflexion in schooling and in competition warm-up arenas. Meanwhile, Heuschmann, Balkenhol, and other like-minded people founded an organization, Xenophon, to bring attention to what they said was a harmful practice. And the dressage community began to press for change. Sometimes change doesn't happen until it's legislated. In 2010, the International Equestrian Federation (FEI) added a section, Annex XIII, to the FEI Stewards Manual for dressage. The addendum includes illustrations of three "permitted stretches," all variations on the low-deep-round or long-and-low outlines. Stewards at CDIs (FEI-sanctioned dressage competitions) are now instructed to intervene if they see riders performing "deliberate extreme flexions of the neck" for more than "very short periods." Stewards are also charged with intervening if they see "neck stretching through forced or aggressive riding" or "a rider deliberately maintaining a sustained fixed head and neck carriage longer than approximately ten minutes," among others. Some dressage enthusiasts remain convinced that rollkur still occurs. During the dressage competition at the 2012 London Olympic Games, some photos circulated on the Internet, appearing to show Swedish competitor Patrik Kittel on Scandic riding in a hyperflexed position. Online forums and the FEI's Facebook page, among others, were barraged with expressions of outrage and accusations that the FEI was failing to enforce Annex XIII of the Stewards Manual. A statement by the FEI indicating that it considers a photo a "moment in time" and asserting that the Olympic horses were in fact properly supervised did little to calm the storm. I asked FEI 4* dressage judge Stephen Clarke of Great Britain, who was a member of the seven-judge panel at the London Games, if he thinks there is any fire behind all the smoke. He stated emphatically that the Olympic training and warm-up arenas are so well policed by the stewards that it is not possible for a competitor to have violated the rules on stretching and hyperflexion and gotten away with it. Inasmuch as I was there, some people have asked me for my opinion. Although I was unable to watch every training session, I did observe some of the Dutch dressage riders schooling and saw no evidence of rollkur. At an Olympic Games, you can't just be a railbird at the competition warm-up arena the way you can at an ordinary show. I couldn't get close enough to the warm-up to be able offer any sort of educated assessment, but I can tell you that the area was not hidden away and there were plenty of stewards on hand. Of course, I can't tell you what riders do at home, when the stewards, the spectators, and the media aren't around. But it is true that the judges in London marked down horses whose necks became short and tight and whose profiles tended to duck behind the vertical, as it's called. According to Stephen Clarke, such horses lost anywhere from 1 to 2 points per movement, depending on the sum total of factors for the movement in question. And it's also true that the dressage gold medalists in London did not persistently get short in the necks and go behind the vertical. For education's sake, I'd like to end this discussion with three photos I took in London. All are of Adelinde Cornelissen and Parzival of the Netherlands, who won a team bronze medal and the individual silver. All were taken just before or during their team Grand Prix test. The first shows Adelinde overflexing Parzival before entering the arena. This position is what would be termed rollkur. It is not pretty to look at, and I am not defending the rider, but I can tell you that she held that position very briefly--a stride or two. Dutch dressage competitor Adelinde Cornelissen overflexes Parzival before entering the arena at the 2012 London Olympic Games. Photo by Jennifer Bryant. The second photo shows Parzival during an unfortunate moment in passage. The FEI dressage rules specify that the horse's poll should be its highest point, and its profile should be on the vertical or slightly in front of the vertical. Parzival is tight in his neck and behind the vertical, and a point on his neck slightly behind his poll appears to have become the highest point as a result. I've added a red line and an arrow to the photo to help show this. These are undesirable factors for which Adelinde was marked down; however, this position is not rollkur. Parzival is short and tight in the neck. His profile has ducked behind the vertical, and his poll is not the highest point. However, this position is not the result of hyperflexion or "rollkur." The final photo, of Parzival in piaffe, is much better. Even in this highly collected movement, the horse's neck does not appear cramped. His poll is the highest point, and his nose is slightly in front of the vertical. Here is Parzival in a much better outline. His poll is the highest point, and his nose is in front of an imaginary vertical line. Photo by Jennifer Bryant. Although the rollkur controversy is not over, I suspect that it is on its way out as a riding technique. There is enough outcry and watchdog efforts on the subject that I doubt the FEI will look the other way when it comes to stewarding. Ultimately, competitors tend to do what scores well with the judges. The judging in London makes me optimistic that correct--yes, classical--training and riding are being rewarded. - See more at: cs.thehorse.com/blogs/2012-london-olympics-equestrian-coverage/archive/2012/08/11/the-quot-rollkur-quot-controversy.aspx#sthash.zLwdySaf.dpuf
@emeraldsnow3713
@emeraldsnow3713 9 жыл бұрын
The fei pictures can be found in the like. This is what rollkur is defined as since none of you ignorant peopl care to open a book Exaggerated flexion of a horse's poll and neck, although surely practiced in the past, became popularized (so to speak) in dressage in the 1980s when Nicole Uphoff of Germany used it as a training technique with her horse, Rembrandt. Riding the notoriously spooky gelding in what was then referred to as a "low, deep, and round" outline helped Uphoff to manage the horse, according to much of what was published at the time. Switching to a competition-acceptable outline or "frame," Uphoff piloted Rembrandt to back-to-back team and individual dressage gold medals at the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games and the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. Uphoff's methods, not surprisingly, were emulated by other dressage riders, both professional and amateur. The German champion Isabell Werth, who won a string of team and individual Olympic gold and silver medals from 1992 through 2000, reportedly schooled some mounts low, deep, and round. The rider whose name has become most closely associated with the method is the Dutch star Anky van Grunsven, Werth's chief rival in the 1900s and 2000s and who herself racked up a running string of team and individual dressage medals, ending with individual golds aboard Salinero in Athens 2004 and Hong Kong 2008. As the years progressed, some dressage enthusiasts became increasingly alarmed by what they viewed as an improper training technique that violated the principles of classical horsemanship. Allegedly less egregious when used by knowledgeable riders, "rollkur," as detractors dubbed it, could be downright harmful to horses when used by inexperienced riders, they asserted. In the mid-2000s the German veterinarian Dr. Gerd Heuschmann, working with German Olympic dressage champion Klaus Balkenhol, created headlines when they publicized the findings of Heuschmann's anatomical and biomechanical studies of hyperflexion. Heuschmann said that hyperflexion not only fails to develop the proper musculature for upper-level dressage, but the exaggerated flexion can also restrict the horse's airway. Heuschmann published a book, Tug of War: Classical Versus "Modern" Dressage, detailing his findings and arguing against the practice of hyperflexion. Before long, rollkur had gone from innovative training method to dressage dirty word. The change in public sentiment happened to coincide with the rise of the Internet and the social-media age, and as a result the practice and the practitioners found images of themselves posted online as dressage spectators and media alike snapped photos and shot video of riders apparently using hyperflexion in schooling and in competition warm-up arenas. Meanwhile, Heuschmann, Balkenhol, and other like-minded people founded an organization, Xenophon, to bring attention to what they said was a harmful practice. And the dressage community began to press for change. Sometimes change doesn't happen until it's legislated. In 2010, the International Equestrian Federation (FEI) added a section, Annex XIII, to the FEI Stewards Manual for dressage. The addendum includes illustrations of three "permitted stretches," all variations on the low-deep-round or long-and-low outlines. Stewards at CDIs (FEI-sanctioned dressage competitions) are now instructed to intervene if they see riders performing "deliberate extreme flexions of the neck" for more than "very short periods." Stewards are also charged with intervening if they see "neck stretching through forced or aggressive riding" or "a rider deliberately maintaining a sustained fixed head and neck carriage longer than approximately ten minutes," among others. Some dressage enthusiasts remain convinced that rollkur still occurs. During the dressage competition at the 2012 London Olympic Games, some photos circulated on the Internet, appearing to show Swedish competitor Patrik Kittel on Scandic riding in a hyperflexed position. Online forums and the FEI's Facebook page, among others, were barraged with expressions of outrage and accusations that the FEI was failing to enforce Annex XIII of the Stewards Manual. A statement by the FEI indicating that it considers a photo a "moment in time" and asserting that the Olympic horses were in fact properly supervised did little to calm the storm. I asked FEI 4* dressage judge Stephen Clarke of Great Britain, who was a member of the seven-judge panel at the London Games, if he thinks there is any fire behind all the smoke. He stated emphatically that the Olympic training and warm-up arenas are so well policed by the stewards that it is not possible for a competitor to have violated the rules on stretching and hyperflexion and gotten away with it. Inasmuch as I was there, some people have asked me for my opinion. Although I was unable to watch every training session, I did observe some of the Dutch dressage riders schooling and saw no evidence of rollkur. At an Olympic Games, you can't just be a railbird at the competition warm-up arena the way you can at an ordinary show. I couldn't get close enough to the warm-up to be able offer any sort of educated assessment, but I can tell you that the area was not hidden away and there were plenty of stewards on hand. Of course, I can't tell you what riders do at home, when the stewards, the spectators, and the media aren't around. But it is true that the judges in London marked down horses whose necks became short and tight and whose profiles tended to duck behind the vertical, as it's called. According to Stephen Clarke, such horses lost anywhere from 1 to 2 points per movement, depending on the sum total of factors for the movement in question. And it's also true that the dressage gold medalists in London did not persistently get short in the necks and go behind the vertical. For education's sake, I'd like to end this discussion with three photos I took in London. All are of Adelinde Cornelissen and Parzival of the Netherlands, who won a team bronze medal and the individual silver. All were taken just before or during their team Grand Prix test. The first shows Adelinde overflexing Parzival before entering the arena. This position is what would be termed rollkur. It is not pretty to look at, and I am not defending the rider, but I can tell you that she held that position very briefly--a stride or two. Dutch dressage competitor Adelinde Cornelissen overflexes Parzival before entering the arena at the 2012 London Olympic Games. Photo by Jennifer Bryant. The second photo shows Parzival during an unfortunate moment in passage. The FEI dressage rules specify that the horse's poll should be its highest point, and its profile should be on the vertical or slightly in front of the vertical. Parzival is tight in his neck and behind the vertical, and a point on his neck slightly behind his poll appears to have become the highest point as a result. I've added a red line and an arrow to the photo to help show this. These are undesirable factors for which Adelinde was marked down; however, this position is not rollkur. Parzival is short and tight in the neck. His profile has ducked behind the vertical, and his poll is not the highest point. However, this position is not the result of hyperflexion or "rollkur." The final photo, of Parzival in piaffe, is much better. Even in this highly collected movement, the horse's neck does not appear cramped. His poll is the highest point, and his nose is slightly in front of the vertical. Here is Parzival in a much better outline. His poll is the highest point, and his nose is in front of an imaginary vertical line. Photo by Jennifer Bryant. Although the rollkur controversy is not over, I suspect that it is on its way out as a riding technique. There is enough outcry and watchdog efforts on the subject that I doubt the FEI will look the other way when it comes to stewarding. Ultimately, competitors tend to do what scores well with the judges. The judging in London makes me optimistic that correct--yes, classical--training and riding are being rewarded. - See more at: cs.thehorse.com/blogs/2012-london-olympics-equestrian-coverage/archive/2012/08/11/the-quot-rollkur-quot-controversy.aspx#sthash.zLwdySaf.dpuf
@emeraldsnow3713
@emeraldsnow3713 9 жыл бұрын
@isabelgandarillas4497
@isabelgandarillas4497 9 жыл бұрын
What a dressage lesson, what a horse, how about mr. Muñoz Diaz and his shoulder movements