Training Tip of the Week: Teach your horse to be responsible for himself when you’re handling his legs.

 

The best way to teach a horse to support himself and not lean on you when you’re picking out his hooves is to not slowly place his foot on the ground when you’re done with it. Instead, when you release the foot, just let it drop out of your hand. That stops the horse from getting in the habit of wanting to lean on you when you pick up his foot. He needs to be responsible for himself. If you pick up the horse’s foot and he leans on you with his body, just drop out from underneath him and let him hit the ground. It won’t take him long to realize that if he leans on you, you’ll jump out from underneath him and he will lose his balance.

It’s the same concept as leaning on a weak post. If you lean on a post and it breaks at the bottom and you fall over, you’re not going to be very keen to lean on the next post because you’re not sure if it can support your weight. But if that post just stays put, there is no reason for you to stop leaning on it.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0601_01

5 years ago

The Walkabout Tour is Headed to Texas in November

The Walkabout Tour is back! Clinton’s bringing the two-day event presented by Ritchie Industries to the Dripping Springs Ranch Park…

Read More
0912_Tip

3 years ago

Training Tip: Take Bending at the Walk to the Next Level

If you’re working toward getting your horse soft and supple throughout his body with the goal of achieving collection at…

Read More
0714_02

6 years ago

Tune In to Training Session 5 in the Reined Cow Horse Series

Hulk, Clinton’s talented reined cow horse prospect, is back in front of the camera for his fifth filmed training session…

Read More
FILES2f20152f022f0224_Tip.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Training Tip: Softness in Your Horse

Horses have a natural instinct to pull and push against pressure – not give and soften to it. So every…

Read More