Find it on the No Worries Club Website: Learning to Neck Rein

NWCfind

“Most people’s idea of neck reining is yanking the reins off to the side and trying to drag the horse in a new direction. It’s like in the old black and white movies where the cowboy reefs his horse over to shoot the bad guy. He drags the reins across his horse’s neck leaving the horse with his head stuck straight up in the air and his mouth gaped open,” Clinton says. “In reality, neck reining, when done correctly, is a higher degree of horsemanship with much finesse involved. Think of top-level reiners who can guide their horses through an intricate pattern without moving their hand from the middle of the horse’s neck.”

Clinton explains how to introduce neck reining to your horse in the 2010 spring edition of the No Worries Journal. You’ll learn how to lay the foundation of neck reining and common mistakes to avoid and how to troubleshoot problems you’re likely to come across as you’re working with your horse. Log on to the No Worries Club website or the Downunder Horsemanship app to read the article now.

A complete library of our quarterly No Worries Journals is available for viewing and downloading on the No Worries Club website and the Downunder Horsemanship app. If you’re not a club member, learn more about the many benefits of being a club member and join our community on our website.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0503_01

4 years ago

May No Worries Club Video Now Streaming

In the May No Worries Club digital download, Professional Clinician Kristin Hamacher introduces “Come To Me,” an exercise she’s developed…

Read More
1002_01

7 years ago

Colt Starting Demo and Auction at the Ranch This Weekend

This Saturday, an event like no other is taking place at the ranch in Stephenville, Texas. Clinton is putting on…

Read More
1012_Tip

4 years ago

Training Tip: Don’t Create a Cinchy-Horse Problem

If thought isn’t given to how you do the cinch up, you can teach a horse to be “cinchy.” A…

Read More
FILES2f20142f082f0805_Tip.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Training Tip: Build the Thinking Side

Imagine the thinking side of your horse’s brain as a big muscle. The more you use a muscle, the stronger…

Read More