Skip to content

The Heart of Dressage: Love and Horsemanship Above All

  • Yolanda Rama

    Yolanda Rama

  • October 9, 2025
  • 3 min de lectura

In the world of competitive dressage, where precision, elegance, and excellence are the ultimate goals, it is easy to forget the most fundamental truth: everything begins and ends with love for the horse.

Show jumping rider Daniel Bluman once said, “The heart of every show athlete should be a pure love for the horse. Horsemanship is the most important quality that a rider can have. I try to lead by example, and I’m absolutely convinced that when you learn the way of horses, everything just flourishes in a different way.”

Though his words come from the world of jumping, they resonate powerfully in dressage. At its core, dressage is not about medals, scores, or recognition. It is about creating harmony — a partnership where horse and rider breathe as one, where the movements look effortless because they are built on trust, patience, and mutual respect.

Horsemanship First

Horsemanship is often misunderstood. It is not simply knowing how to ride or how to train. It is the ability to understand the horse as an individual — its strengths, weaknesses, moods, and fears. A true horseman listens before asking, feels before correcting, and builds confidence before demanding performance.

The greatest dressage riders are not only technicians but also caretakers of the horse’s spirit. They know that no brilliance in the arena can come without the quiet hours in the stable: grooming, feeding, walking, listening. That is where the connection is forged, and where performance truly begins.

When Love Guides Training

Horses are extraordinarily generous creatures. When they feel safe, understood, and respected, they give us more than we could ever ask. Training guided by love does not mean being less ambitious — it means being more ethical, more consistent, and more attentive. It means recognizing that every piaffe, every passage, and every flying change is the result of years of patient trust-building.

As Bluman said, “when you learn the way of horses, everything flourishes in a different way.” In dressage, that flourishing can be seen in the sparkle of a horse’s eye, the relaxation in its neck, the elasticity in its gaits — the unmistakable joy of a horse that wants to dance.

A Responsibility Beyond Sport

For those of us who live and breathe dressage, there is also a responsibility to lead by example. The way we treat our horses — in training, at shows, and at home — shapes not only our results but also the future of the sport itself. Audiences today are increasingly sensitive to animal welfare. The only way to safeguard the beauty and legacy of dressage is to ensure that its heart always remains where it belongs: in the horse.


At Gallery Horse, we believe that the true greatness of a dressage horse is revealed only when talent meets horsemanship. The best results are not forged in pressure, but in partnership.

Subscribe to stay updated on the best selection of dressage horses

Related articles

Yolanda Rama
October 8, 2025

Stable Vices: Contagious or a Management Problem?

Cribbing, weaving, and stall kicking are not contagious — they’re cries for help. When several horses in the same barn develop the same bad habits, it’s not imitation, it’s a management issue. Lack of turnout, poor feeding schedules, and social isolation are the real culprits. Stable vices don’t spread like viruses. They spread like stress.

Read more
Yolanda Rama
October 8, 2025

The Horse’s Back: The Key in Every Discipline

Dressage, jumping, hacking — no matter the discipline, everything begins with the back. It’s more than where the saddle rests. The back is the bridge between power and balance, comfort and longevity. When neglected, it’s often the silent cause behind injuries, tension, or resistance under saddle.

Read more
Yolanda Rama
September 29, 2025

How Many Dressage Horse Buyers Really Know the Training Scale?

The Most Overlooked Question in Dressage Horse Buying: When buying a dressage horse, most riders ask about movements — flying changes, pirouettes, or show results. But rarely do they ask the one thing that truly defines long-term success: Where is this horse on the training scale? At Gallery Horse, we believe understanding rhythm, relaxation, contact, and impulsion is essential — not optional. Because in the end, you’re not just buying a performer. You’re buying an athlete in training.

Read more