Training Tip: Pushy Mustang Won’t Roundpen

0318_Tip

Question: I have a 3-year-old mustang mare, and I’ve always had problems with her pushing her chest into stall doors, attempting to run me over and shaking her head, which has resulted in her hitting her head against mine twice. She’s very belligerent and cannot focus on anything I ask her to do. I tried to do the roundpenning exercise in the Fundamentals, which in the end did not work because she’d push into the fencing, attempt to jump over the fencing, wouldn’t turn into the center of the roundpen, and tried to run past me even if I smacked her across the muzzle with the string on the stick. I really need help as to how to fix this, or should I just skip the roundpenning exercise? – M. Scheering

Answer: Once wild mustangs learn not to fear humans, it’s very common for them to get pushy. The longer they’re allowed to get away with the behavior, the worse they get. So it’s not a surprise your mare is acting this way.

Without seeing a video of you working with her, it’s hard to tell exactly what is going wrong, but I can say with confidence roundpenning is exactly what this mare needs. I would not skip that exercise. I’d study the video and read the Arena Mate in detail, making sure you know every step of the exercise and how to respond when your mare won’t go forward or tries to run past you. Then, video yourself doing the exercise. Watch the video and compare what you’re doing to me doing the goal of the exercise. Pay close attention to my body language, where I’m standing in the roundpen, and how I’m cueing the horse.

If that doesn’t do the trick, your best bet is to hire a clinician or ambassador to come out to your barn and work with the two of you. They’ll be able to step you through the exercise and ensure that you both stay safe. The training kits are great, but nothing beats hands-on help.

Another thing to consider is your experience level. I’m not saying that you don’t have the skill set necessary, but you may also have to take a good hard look at yourself and decide if you’re too inexperienced to work with a horse like this mare and need to send her to a professional trainer. From your description, she requires someone who knows the Method well and won’t be intimidated by her behavior. If you’re a novice horseman, she definitely doesn’t sound like a good horse to learn the Method on. There’s nothing wrong with admitting a horse is above your skill set. It happens to all horsemen, including me.

Looking for more training tips? Check out the No Worries Club. Have a training question? Send it to us at [email protected].

More News

Back to all news

See All
1018_tip

10 years ago

Training Tip: The Best Way to End a Training Session

If you finish when the horse is frustrated or misbehaving, that’s what he’s going to remember the next day, and…

Read More
0507_04

7 years ago

Trailer Needed for Iowa Tour

We’re on the hunt for a two-horse, straight load horse trailer with a ramp to use during the trailer loading…

Read More
012726_Tip

5 months ago

Training Tip: Getting the “Fresh” Off a Horse

Question: If I turn my horse out during the day for him to get the fresh off, do I still…

Read More
0523_01a

9 years ago

Ranch Rally: Less Than 75 Tickets Available

We’re down to less than 75 tickets for our last Ranch Rally, and Clinton is ensuring that this year’s Rally…

Read More