Training Tip: Move All Around Your Horse

1106_Tip

A safe, dependable horse takes everything you do in the saddle in stride. If you need to put on a jacket, you should be able to do so without worrying about your horse spooking and taking off. If you need to pick up a trail map, you shouldn’t have to worry about your horse catching it out of the corner of his eye and getting startled or hearing the paper crunch and taking off. On no horse should you have to sit like a closed pocket knife, afraid to move.

Getting a horse broke to you moving in the saddle and seeing objects above his eye level starts from day one of his training and is the result of a good desensitizing program. In fact, your goal as a trainer should be to expose your horse to as many objects that move and make a noise as you possibly can.

When I start colts, I make a point to move all over them, rubbing up their necks, back on their hindquarters and behind their tails, I slap my hands against my legs, I take my hat off and wave it in the air, I do anything I can think of to start getting those colts broke to me moving around on them. From day one, I want a colt to know that it’s completely normal to feel a human moving on his back and to see and hear a variety of objects above his eye level.

The worst thing you can do on a colt or any horse is to sit like a closed pocket knife, never moving out of position. The one day that you do need to move – you need to reach down and open a gate, a friend hands you a bottle of water, or you wave to someone – your horse will dump you on your head because you’ve never prepared him to see you moving on his back like that. Horses get good at whatever we allow them to practice.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1119_01

1 year ago

Hasty’s Haven Selected as Our Clemson Charity Group

When the Walkabout Tour presented by Ritchie Industries comes to South Carolina in December, Hasty’s Haven will be joining us…

Read More
FILES2f20152f072f0728_02.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Tunica, Mississippi Fundamentals Clinic

26 individual Fundamentals groundwork and riding exercises learned 24-plus hours of instruction, covering the first level of the Method 20…

Read More
0611_Tip

2 years ago

Training Tip: Recognize When a Horse is a Bad Match for You

Question: I have a 4-year-old Quarter Horse/Arab cross I was given for free and was told he was only a…

Read More
FILES2f20162f042f0412_07.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Get Published in the Journal

The best part of our No Worries Club is our members! We look forward to hearing your personal success stories,…

Read More