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Longeing Horses

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Longeing Horses

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Longeing Horses: Joint Risks, Safe Training Limits, and Better Alternatives

By Dr Duncan Houston


Longeing can be a useful training tool, but when it is overused, too fast, or done on circles that are too small, it can put unnecessary strain on a horse’s joints.

Many people think of longeing as harmless groundwork. Sometimes it is. But circular exercise changes how force travels through the limbs, and that matters, especially in young horses, older horses, and those already under heavy training load.

The key question is not whether longeing is good or bad. It is how often, how fast, how small the circle is, and what purpose it serves.


Quick Answer

Longeing is not inherently harmful, but repeated work on small circles, especially at trot and canter, increases joint loading and can contribute to wear over time. It is safest when sessions are short, purposeful, done on larger circles, and used as one tool rather than a daily default.


Why Longeing Changes Joint Stress

When a horse moves in a straight line, force is distributed more evenly through the limbs and joints.

When the horse moves on a circle:

  • the inside and outside limbs do not load equally

  • balance shifts continuously

  • joints work through repeated asymmetrical force

  • the same structures are stressed again and again

This is why circular work is mechanically different from straight-line exercise.

In practice, the concern is not a few careful minutes of longeing. The concern is repetitive, high-load circular exercise becoming routine.


What Makes Longeing More Risky

Several factors increase the chance of joint strain.

Small Circles

The tighter the circle, the greater the stress on:

  • inside limb joints

  • supporting soft tissues

  • balance and body alignment

Small circles are one of the biggest risk factors.


Higher Speeds

Walking is very different from cantering repeatedly on a circle.

As speed increases:

  • concussion increases

  • limb loading increases

  • coordination demands rise

  • joint stress becomes more significant

In practice, fast longeing is where many problems start.


Frequency

Occasional sessions are very different from daily use.

A horse that is longed every day, especially for conditioning or to “take the edge off,” is exposed to repeated loading that may accumulate over time.


Duration

Even a reasonable circle becomes a problem if the horse spends too long on it.

The issue is not just one stride. It is hundreds of repeated strides in the same pattern.


Uneven Surfaces

Poor footing increases the risk further.

This includes:

  • deep arenas

  • slippery ground

  • hard uneven footing

These surfaces magnify joint and soft tissue stress.


How Serious Is the Risk?

Low Risk

  • occasional longeing

  • large circle

  • mainly walk and controlled trot

  • short duration

What this means: generally acceptable for most sound horses


Moderate Risk

  • regular longeing several times per week

  • moderate circle size

  • repeated trot work

What this means: joint load is increasing and should be monitored


High Risk

  • daily longeing

  • frequent canter work

  • tight circles

  • prolonged sessions

What this means: repetitive joint strain is likely


Very High Risk

  • long, fast sessions

  • small circles

  • young, old, lame, or previously injured horse

What this means: strong potential for aggravating or creating orthopedic problems


Which Horses Need the Most Caution

Some horses tolerate longeing less well than others.

Young Horses

Their joints and soft tissues are still developing. Repetitive circular loading is not ideal during growth.

Older Horses

Existing joint wear, stiffness, or subtle arthritis may be worsened by frequent circular work.

Performance Horses

These horses already carry a high orthopedic workload. Extra repetitive joint loading adds to total stress.

Rehabbing Horses

Longeing may be useful in some rehab plans, but only when carefully prescribed. It should never be automatic.


When Longeing Is Most Useful

Longeing still has value when it is used properly.

It can help with:

  • brief assessment of movement

  • controlled groundwork

  • voice training

  • short warm-up sessions

  • focused schooling with a clear purpose

The problem is not longeing itself. The problem is using it as a catch-all form of exercise.


Safe Longeing Guidelines

Use a Larger Circle

For trot and canter work, larger is better. A wide circle reduces the intensity of asymmetric loading.

Keep Speed Controlled

Prefer:

  • walk

  • controlled trot

Use canter sparingly and only with purpose.

Keep Sessions Short

Long sessions add repeated strain without adding much training value.

Change Direction Evenly

Do not overload one side. Balanced direction changes reduce asymmetry.

Use Good Footing

Choose surfaces that are:

  • level

  • not too deep

  • not slippery

  • not excessively hard

Know Why You Are Doing It

Do not longe just to tire the horse out. Every session should have a training or management purpose.


What To Do Right Now

If you currently longe your horse regularly, ask:

  • how often is it happening

  • how big is the circle

  • how much of it is at trot or canter

  • is it replacing better exercise options

  • does the horse actually need this workload

If the answer is “most days” or “mainly to burn energy,” the routine probably needs adjusting.


Better Alternatives to Repetitive Longeing

For many horses, straighter and more varied exercise is better.

Useful alternatives include:

  • in-hand walking

  • long-lining

  • straight-line pole work

  • hacking at walk and trot

  • hill work in straight lines

  • structured groundwork without repeated circles

These options often condition the horse more safely and more usefully.


When Is Longeing a Bad Idea?

Longeing should be limited or avoided if:

  • the horse is lame

  • there is known joint disease

  • the footing is poor

  • the horse is very young and being drilled repeatedly

  • the horse is already under an intense performance workload

In these cases, circular work may worsen existing problems.


Common Mistakes

  • using longeing every day out of convenience

  • working on circles that are too small

  • cantering too much

  • using longeing to exhaust the horse rather than train it

  • ignoring footing quality

  • assuming groundwork is always low impact

In practice, some of the most overworked horses are not under saddle. They are over-lunged.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is longeing bad for horses?
Not inherently. It becomes a problem when it is too frequent, too fast, too long, or done on circles that are too small.

How long should a longeing session be?
Usually short and purposeful. Long sessions tend to add strain without much added benefit.

Is cantering on the lunge safe?
Sometimes, but it should be limited. Canter increases joint loading significantly, especially on smaller circles.

Are young horses more at risk?
Yes. Repetitive circular loading is more concerning in growing horses.

What is a better alternative for fitness?
Straight-line work, hill work, long-lining, and controlled conditioning are often better choices.


Final Thoughts

Longeing is a useful tool, but it should stay a tool, not become the entire training plan.

The key questions are:

  • is the circle large enough

  • is the speed appropriate

  • is the session short and purposeful

  • is this the best option for this horse

When those questions are answered well, longeing can be helpful. When they are ignored, it becomes one more source of avoidable joint stress.


If you are unsure whether your horse’s current longeing routine is helping or slowly adding strain, ASK A VET™ can help you review the setup and guide you toward a safer, more effective training plan.

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Approuvé par les chiens
Conçu pour durer
Facile à nettoyer
Conçu et testé par des vétérinaires
Prêt pour l'aventure
Testé et Fiable