Sports Training

Sports Training

Club sports training is designed for riders who want to take a step beyond recreational riding and commit to serious, long-term work with horses. Unlike recreational riding, which offers flexibility and a more relaxed approach, sports training requires consistency, discipline, and responsibility. Here, riding is no longer occasional, it becomes a process where progress is built through structure, effort, and time.

Training sessions are held three times per week, but the work does not end when you leave the saddle. Each rider works with their own horse, taking responsibility for its preparation, equipment, and condition before and after every session. Through this approach, riders do not only learn how to ride, but how to understand the horse, recognize its needs, and build a relationship based on trust. Ground work, ridden training, and trail riding form a complete system that develops stability and confidence in different situations.

Training focus

Sports training is focused on the technical and systematic development of the rider, primarily through dressage. At the same time, it develops control, precision, and feel for the horse, along with discipline, focus, and responsibility that are essential for any serious sport.

The trainers work with clear goals. The approach is direct, structured, and focused on progress, with higher expectations and a clear direction for each rider’s development.

Competitions and development

Training within the club is oriented toward dressage competitions. All members train with this goal, and the club actively guides riders through the entire process, from preparation to entering the competition arena.

Through this work, riders gain experience, confidence, and the consistency required for serious development in the sport. For many, this is also a step toward working with privately owned horses and long-term involvement in equestrian sport.

Who is this program for?

Sports training is intended exclusively for riders who have completed our riding school and are ready for the next step.

This program is not for everyone. It requires time, commitment, and a willingness to work, but that is exactly why it delivers the greatest progress. Those who stay on this path develop a level of confidence, independence, and understanding of the horse that cannot be achieved through occasional riding.

What does this path bring?

Sports training means consistency, responsibility, and a clear structure. It is a process in which the rider becomes confident in the saddle, independent in working with the horse, and prepared for the demands of the sport.

The goal is not quick results, but to develop a rider who understands the horse and is capable of guiding it through different situations, both in training and in competition.

Why sports training?

If recreational riding means riding when you have time, sports training means commitment regardless of circumstances. It is a path for those who want more, to progress, to compete, and to grow through a serious and long-term process.