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Want a Soft Horse

Every time your horse leans on the reins or the lead rope or on the handler see it as an opportunity.

Don’t just hold and teach him that it is ok to lean.

Don’t give to him and reward him for leaning.

Don’t punish him and make him too frightened to give you a soft feel when you want it.

Ian working with a horse at a clinic. It was cold.

Don’t hold him tight and make him feel trapped so that he feels like he has to lean or pull.

Don’t avoid his leaning
by staying out of his way or letting him teach you.

On the ground or while riding, don’t avoid teaching him his responsibility to not pull or push on you.

Avoid making it something he must endure every time you handle him for the rest of his life. That is neither comfortable for the rider or fair on the horse.

You could just hold a little more and release when he gives you a soft feel.

Maybe move his feet a little until he stops leaning and then let him stand as a reward.

Also, if he is leaning hard enough, follow him and maintain that contact until he stops or steps forward and then release.

You could use your presence and focus to help him understand what to do to gain that release.

Try to set the situation up again a few times so that he has a chance to properly learn how to avoid being in this conflict.

You could be totally consistent about this so that he learns to have a conflict free time every time he is with you.

Find some help with this if you don’t know what to do.

You could teach him in a subtle way at a stand-still how to respond to a soft feel so that he understands it  Giving your horse a nice life means not shirking your responsibilities here. The more you allow him to learn that leaning is ok the more he will have to endure the conflict in the future.

Often the behaviour that causes the horse and rider the most discomfort “is not” caused by anything sinister. It is often caused by unwittingly teaching the horse to respond the wrong way to things.

Remember every time your horse leans you are presented with another opportunity to make his life more comfortable in the future.

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Confused?

Confusion and indecision is rife in the horse world.

There are so many ideas and gadgets and supplements and feeds etc out there all being marketed as the best way to go and the only thing to do if you like your horse even in a moderate way.

Ian and Kendric having thinking time

On the net everyone has an opinion on how everything should or should not be. Often these opinions Continue reading Confused?

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Preventative Riding

Thought for the day:
The most common cause of issues between a horse and rider under saddle is what I call “preventative riding”.

Preventative riding is what a rider is doing when they spend more time trying to stop the horse from doing things than directing him or allowing him to do things.

If you ride in a preventative manner by holding onto your horse with your reins and legs in order to control it or prevent it from going too fast or from veering off-course or from bucking or any other manner of unwanted behavior you are most likely causing the behavior that you are frightened of.

Riding like this causes riders to be stiff and unbalanced and to hunch up when the horse panics. This in turn greatly increases the chances of falling off.

There are horses around that deal with this type of riding but they do so because they are dull or desensitized to it or are just working in a state of learned helplessness.

You can’t have feel when you use your reins like a set of handlebars or a brake lever.

Riding properly into the bridle on an engaged horse has nothing to do with anything I have written above.
All horses need to learn to go on a loose rein also.

There is so much rhetoric thrown around, about getting a horse to trust you, but “trusting your horse” is probably the biggest step you must take toward this.

If safety is your main concern then you need help to learn that safety comes from keeping your horse from feeling trapped, learning to balance, learning to teach your horse how to take direction and learning that the horses energy comes from from your energy.

You may want the fancy stuff or just a safe horse but learning not to be a preventative rider is the only way forward. This is walking before you can run. It can’t be over done.

Self control is the most important type of control there is when riding.

The picture is a group of great people working on this at one of our clinics.