Try GOLD - Free
The Perfect Circle
Horse and Rider
|Spring 2020
The Perfect Circle Being able to walk a perfect circle is no easy task. Brad Barkemeyer breaks down the basics of this exercise and how it’ll help your horse stay collected without losing any forward motion.

As easy as it sounds, walking a perfect circle can actually be quite difficult. Especially if you’re working with a green horse who has a different plan in mind. Regardless of a horse’s age or level of riding experience, I like to include this perfect-circle exercise into my daily warmup to ensure my horse is listening to my cues and has forward motion in his feet when I ask him to stay framed up and collected during a training session.
Here I’ll break down the steps I take so you can include this perfect-circle exercise to your daily warmup.
STEP 1 Find Your CIrcle
To begin this drill, I recommend riding your horse two-handed in a snaffle bit. As you advance this exercise, you can move up to a shank bit your horse is comfortable in, but when you do that, continue to ride two-handed to ensure you can get your horse framed up properly.
Find a spot in the arena and walk in a 10-foot circle. If your horse doesn’t like working in the middle of the arena, I recommend walking there. If he likes to lean toward the gate to go back to the barn, practice this drill in front of it so he learns that he has to work when he’s near it.
If you struggle with distances, an easy way to help you stay on your circle is by riding in a freshly dragged arena. If you’re not able to drag the arena or aren’t riding in an area where you can see your tracks, place a barrel, cone, or anything you have sitting around as the center of your circle to help you better judge where the center of your circle is.
STEP 2 Ask for collection
This story is from the Spring 2020 edition of Horse and Rider.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Horse and Rider

Horse and Rider
WESTERN VERSUS WESTERN
There's no denying that all-around and ranch classes are evolving. While it might seem like one is pushing out the other, the truth is, they need each other.
7 mins
Fall 2025

Horse and Rider
Horse Life
A veritable all-around cowgirl event, the 2025 Top Hand Cowgirl Challenge takes place at Randolph, Minnesota's Simons Arena Oct. 15-19, beginning with two multi-event clinics—one for the “Everyday Cowgirl,” the other a “Masterclass” with NRHA Million Dollar Rider Craig Johnson and all-around AQHA judge and competitor Amy Marx.
2 mins
Fall 2025

Horse and Rider
Confidence Over Obstacles
Instilling confidence in a young horse isn't easy, but repetition and clear instruction can set you up for success.
2 mins
Fall 2025

Horse and Rider
Improving Body Control
Body control is an essential skill for every rider.
3 mins
Fall 2025

Horse and Rider
Sorting Geldings
Evaluate and place these ranch sorting geldings. Then see how your choices compare to our expert judge's.
3 mins
Fall 2025

Horse and Rider
Saddling for the Long Haul
Your saddling habits can lead your horse to love or resent his job. Your actions choose the path forward.
2 mins
Fall 2025

Horse and Rider
Independence at the Barn
How will you know when your child is ready for more responsibility and freedom at the barn?
2 mins
Fall 2025

Horse and Rider
Young Horse Health Check
Buying a weanling or yearling? Here's what to expect when it comes to health and development milestones from birth to age 2—so your young horse grows up strong, sound, and ready for the ride ahead.
2 mins
Fall 2025

Horse and Rider
The Role of Horse Rescues
Rescues play an essential part of the horse industry, across all disciplines.
4 mins
Fall 2025

Horse and Rider
It's Not Just in Their DNA: How Care Shapes a Horse's Future
When it comes to developing a great horse, how much credit goes to DNA and how much to the humans who raise them?
7 mins
Fall 2025
Translate
Change font size