Training Tip: Use the “Hot Potato Give” to Teach Your Horse to Soften to the Bit

0519_Tip

The first step to teaching a horse how to collect is to teach him to give to the bit, period. Always start at the standstill, and then progress through the gaits as the horse understands. The ultimate goal is collection, but in the beginning, it is just a soft feel. When you first pick up on the reins at the standstill and ask the horse to tuck his nose in and create slack in the reins, he may only soften for a split second. And that’s all he needs to do in order for you to reward him. As soon as the horse creates the tiniest bit of slack in the reins, throw the reins up his neck as quickly as you can. When I say “throw the reins up his neck” I literally mean throw the reins up his neck. Exaggerate the release of pressure so the horse knows he did the right thing. Whenever you teach a horse something for the first time, you always want to exaggerate to teach and refine as he understands.

That quick release of pressure is what I call the “Hot Potato Give” because I want you to simulate what you’d do if someone threw you a hot potato. If I threw you a hot potato, what would you do? You’d immediately throw it to someone else because it’s hot and burning your hands. You want your horse to think that every time you pick up on the bit, the bit becomes a hot potato, and he should immediately give to the pressure and soften. As soon as he gives, you’ll act like the reins are a hot potato and burning your hands, and you’ll quickly throw them away. Since horses learn from the release of pressure and not the pressure itself, the quicker you can throw the reins away and reward the horse, the softer he will get and the quicker he will learn.

More News

Back to all news

See All

8 years ago

Training Tip: The Reactive Side will Always Exist

No matter how great a trainer you are you will never be able to completely eliminate the reactive side of…

Read More
0204_01

6 years ago

Arizona Desert Adventure, Part Two Released

The February No Worries Club member video finds Clinton back in the Arizona desert for part two of the Arizona…

Read More
1129_tip

9 years ago

Training Tip: Don’t Drill on Backing Exercises

When you first introduce the Fundamentals Backing Up exercises to your horse (Method 1: Tap the Air; Method 2: Wiggle,…

Read More
0429_Tip

11 months ago

Training Tip: Horse Only Backs Short Distances

Question: I’ve taught my horse all of the Fundamentals backing up exercises and she does them pretty well for five…

Read More