03/11/2026
Most riders believe their horse is straight because they can ride down the rail without drifting. But straightness is not about staying between two fences. It’s about alignment through the body, from poll to hind foot. That alignment directly affects performance, confidence, and long-term soundness.
Carleton Brooks returns again and again to fundamentals. In discussing conformation, he reminds readers plainly: “Form is function, so a horse is going to hold up better if their body is more correct.” If the body is not aligned correctly, whether due to build or training, the function suffers. “The way their legs line up underneath their body is very important.”
Straightness means the hind feet follow the line of the front feet. The shoulders and hips stay aligned with the direction of travel. The horse pushes evenly into both reins. There is no drifting shoulder, no escaping haunch, no neck bent one way while the ribcage falls the other.
Almost every horse is naturally crooked. That’s normal. What matters is whether we address it or allow it to become habitual compensation. When crookedness becomes a pattern, one hind leg works harder. One shoulder carries more weight. Over time, uneven loading affects muscle development, jump technique, and durability.
Brooks illustrates structural imbalance with a simple analogy: “If your table has one leg that’s not straight, it is not going to be sturdy.” The same principle applies under saddle. A body that is not aligned cannot remain sturdy under athletic demand.
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