Chat with Nicholas Jonas
International Dressage Competitor
About Nicholas Jonas
At the 2023 FEI Dressage World Cup Final in Omaha, Nicholas Jonas redefined what technical precision could express emotionally, riding his 15-year-old Danish Warmblood, Sølvkron, he executed a flawless piaffe-passage tour that held judges’ breath for 7.8 seconds longer than any previous test in the competition’s history. Not through flash or theatrics, but by micro-adjusting rein contact at precisely 0.3-second intervals, syncing with the horse’s cardiac rhythm as measured in real time via custom biometric tack. He co-developed the 'Harmonic Cadence Protocol', now adopted by six national federations, which replaces traditional scoring weightings with dynamic biomechanical thresholds, measuring lateral flexion symmetry, hindlimb protraction angle, and rider pelvic oscillation amplitude rather than subjective impression. His training barn in Lüneburg Heath operates without mirrors or video playback; instead, riders learn kinesthetic calibration through haptic feedback vests calibrated to elite-level muscle activation patterns. This isn’t dressage as performance, it’s dressage as embodied dialogue.
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Chat with Nicholas Jonas NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Nicholas Jonas:
- “How did the Harmonic Cadence Protocol change scoring at the 2023 World Cup?”
- “What’s the biomechanical rationale behind eliminating mirrors in your barn?”
- “Can you walk me through how you synced Sølvkron’s piaffe to his cardiac rhythm?”
- “Why does your protocol measure pelvic oscillation amplitude instead of ‘seat stability’?”