Training Tip: Horse Tuning You Out? Get Him Dialed in Right From the Start

0107_Tip

You can stop your horse from tuning you out by keeping him engaged with you. You do that by moving his feet forwards, backwards, left and right. When you start a training session, you should have a set plan about what you want to accomplish with your horse. I do with my performance horses.

Each day, I have a plan – today I want to work on speed control, tomorrow I want to focus on stops, etc. At the start of each training session, I spend a good 10 to 15 minutes warming the horse up. It’s my chance to prepare the horse for the session, and it’s also a great opportunity to see where the horse is at mentally and physically for the day. Is he in a good mind frame? Does he feel off or sore?

Sometimes, even though I enter a training session with a set plan, depending on how my horse reacts in the warm-up, I change the plan to reflect what the horse needs that day. Just as much as you expect your horse to tune in to you, a good horseman tunes in to what his horse is telling him.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0822_05

9 years ago

2018 Clinician Academy Nearly Booked

A talented group of horsemen is signed up to attend the 2018 Clinician Academy. Clinton and his clinicians are excited…

Read More
FILES2f20152f032f0310_05.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

World-Class Horses

You’ve seen good performance horses work. They move with supreme athletic ability – sliding, turning back a cow, spinning or…

Read More
1011_Tip

3 years ago

Training Tip: First-Time Hobbling Struggles

Question: I recently put sideline hobbles on Tanzy, my 4-year-old mare. She freaked out. She ran backwards as best as…

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