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I honestly have no experience in course design, I just design courses for fun on my iPad, have a strong interest in it and watch a lot of international show jumping, so take what I say with a grain of salt :P
A lot of courses are designed to take the horse and rider throughout the whole arena so I would consider that when placing obstacles, and changes of direction as well.
I would also think of it in components if you don't want to move things around a lot. Such as bending lines, combinations, etc. Maybe if you have a triple combination or 3-part line in one course, you could make it a double instead for another and have the course take a turn before the 3rd fence? That could be a good test of communication (i did this in a lesson once, the horse and I were not communicating well and he locked onto the 3rd fence and jumped it despite me trying my best to turn him lol) I would also experiment with courses that have different approaches to certain lines. This is harder to explain in writing but let's say from jump A to jump B, there's another jump you pass by towards jump B. The rider could choose to go around the outside of the middle jump and have a more straight-on approach but miss the opportunity to cut time. Whereas going around the inside of the middle jump you could save time but have a more difficult approach.
Just my two cents!
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Oh absolutely! We did a clinic where we worked on courses like that. Edited at July 22, 2023 12:23 AM by TenaciTea
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Raindrop Ridge said: TenaciTea said: Just jumpers, no hunters :)
I could also help you do jumper courses, my barn has held a couple shows and i've been to about a million shows :)
Jumper courses are meant to be technical. Easy lines with no real way to shave off time isn't fun.
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Maybe look at some hunter courses, but specifically from handy classes? If it's for jumpers, you wouldn't want trot jumps and gait changes, but I find handy courses to be quite intriuing for this purpose nonetheless. I really liked the 4-jump square situation in this course.
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TenaciTea said: Raindrop Ridge said: TenaciTea said: Just jumpers, no hunters :)
I could also help you do jumper courses, my barn has held a couple shows and i've been to about a million shows :)
Jumper courses are meant to be technical. Easy lines with no real way to shave off time isn't fun.
i know, i've been to kentucky, hits chicago and all of those big shows :) i'm just offering to help
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Edited at October 18, 2023 02:07 PM by Bella Luna Farms
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