Sandy Savage Dressage

9439 Clay Station Rd, Wilton, CA 95693
Sandy Savage Dressage Sandy Savage Dressage is one of the popular Professional Service located in 9439 Clay Station Rd ,Wilton listed under Professional Services in Wilton ,

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Bronze, Silver and Gold Medalist

Sandy is certified by the Swedish National Riding School in Strömsholm in an extensive three year program and spent a year in full training with Olympic gold medalist Gabriella Grillo in Germany. She has cliniced with notable trainers including Steffen Peters, Volker Bromman, Arthur Kottas, Conrad Schumacher, Anders Lindgren, Ulla Salzgeber, Mette Rozencrantz, and she continues to ride regularly for Volker Bromman.

Sandy began riding at the age of eight in the Los Angeles area with Swedish trainer Lilian Van Dahn. Sandy's love for horses led her to become an instructor at the Traditional Equitation School which was owned by her trainer Lilian and her partner Pat Kinnaman located at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center.

In 1988, Sandy was invited to train at Strömsholm, the Swedish National Riding School, where Bo Tibblin was the head instructor. Sandy and and her Swedish Warbmlood, Montag, studied two years in the advanced course. The training was strictly focused on riding with no theory. Sandy rode six horses a day doing everything including breaking young horses, jumping, cross country, long lining, driving a carriage, and of course, dressage.

Sandy returned to the Los Angeles area in 1991 with Montag and showed him at the Prix St. Georges level. Later that year, she took her horse Montag to Germany to train with Gabriella Grillo for eight months and stayed until the Spring of 1992 when half of the U.S. Olympic short listed riders trained there. Notable Olympic team members training with Gabriella included Carol Lavell, Michael Poulin, Charlotte Bredahl and Hilda Gurney, as well as German Olympic medalist Nicole Upphoff who stabled her horses permanently at Gabriella’s during the period Sandy visited. Sandy was privileged to ride one of Gabriella’s Grand Prix horses during her stay, and Sandy returned twice more, to continue her training with Gabriella. In 1993, Sandy returned to school at Strömsholm to complete the theoretical part of her training having become fluent in speaking, reading, and writing the Swedish language. The theoretical training included technique for teaching riding, running a riding school, anatomy, feeding, training, finances, and other required skills. At that time she was training with Eva-Karin Oscarsson. Sandy taught various levels of dressage and jumping at a riding school in Sweden for a year before starting her own training business. She continued to show Montag up to the Intermediare level while schooling all the movements of Grand Prix and training her second horse, Watteau, to the Prix St. Georges level. Both horses consistently placed at each show.

In July of 1999, Sandy sold Watteau, then age 7, and returned to Los Angeles. When asked whom Sandy felt had the greatest influence on her teaching and riding skills and to describe her teaching philosophy, Sandy had this to say:

“I feel that Gabriella Grillo has had the greatest influence on my riding and teaching. She taught me that every horse has a talent; you just have to find the way to bring it out. Gabriella is extremely thorough, and would leave no stone unturned in her quest for excellence. Our lessons were long, sometimes 2 hours, but not hard. She interspersed riding with long and vivid explanations of what she meant. She was always compassionate to each horse and extremely detail oriented with regards to rider position. I like to do the same, but I realize that 2 hour lessons are not very practical. I feel I am also very thorough in my teaching. I believe that you need to have a good position and a correct understanding of the aids to ride your horse in the proper frame. If you can do that, then the movements come easily. I take nothing for granted and assume nothing when it comes to evaluating what my new students know. You may ask me anything you like, and there are no stupid questions. I am not the type of trainer to just come and run you through a bunch of movements and give my critique. That is what the judges are for. My goal is to really teach my students to ride and to get along better with their horses through better understanding.”

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