Training Tip: Horse is Nervous About an Object While Cross-Tied

0521_Tip

It’s completely normal for horses to get nervous or anxious while tied up, including when they are in cross-ties. Sometimes horses will get anxious about activity going on around them or a strange object nearby. This can be especially true if you’ve taken your horse off your property to another location.

Whenever your horse is frightened or nervous about something, he uses the reactive side of his brain. You need to get him to use the thinking side of his brain and you do that by moving his feet forwards, backwards, left and right and rewarding the slightest try.

My go-to solution in this situation to build the horse’s confidence and get him to stand quietly in the cross-ties is the Sending Exercise from the Fundamentals Series. Take your horse off the cross-ties and get him as close as you can to whatever is causing him to react. Maybe it’s a donkey in a nearby pasture, an ATV idling outside the barn, a group of kids playing on a swing set … it doesn’t matter what the object is, just that you get your horse off the cross-ties and start moving his feet.

Your end goal will be to send the horse between you and the object in a 4-foot gap. However, where you initially begin isn’t important; what is important is that you establish a starting point you can build off of. So, depending on how scared of the object your horse is, you may initially be 20 feet away from the object, and that’s OK. You’ll gradually work your horse closer to the object until he can walk calmly between you and it in a 4-foot gap.

Practice sending the horse between you and the object until he walks through the gap with a relaxed attitude. If he’s worried about the object and races past it, continue sending him back and forth in front of it until he walks calmly through the gap and uses the thinking side of his brain.

When he’s confident around the object and no longer worried about it, you’re safe to put him back on the cross-ties. If the object is something that’s new to your horse’s environment, you may have to practice the Sending Exercise next to the object for a few days in a row when you first bring your horse to the cross-ties. Each day, you’ll have to reinforce to him that the object is nothing to be worried about. After a few repetitions, you’ll have built his confidence and he will no longer be worried about it.

Have a horsemanship question or looking for more training tips? Check out the No Worries Club.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0317_02

5 years ago

Texas Downunder Horsemanship Ranch Sold

The Downunder Horsemanship Ranch in Stephenville, Texas is changing hands. Clinton initially offered the iconic facility for sale in 2018…

Read More
1106_05

7 years ago

2019 Walkabout Tour Schedule Released

Clinton is bringing the Walkabout Tour presented by Ritchie Industries to four locations around the United States this year! February…

Read More
NWCfind

8 years ago

Find it on the No Worries Club Website: Horse Doesn’t Wait for Cue to Trot

“Clinton, no matter how much flexing I do before I get on or how many One Rein Stops I do,…

Read More
1112_Tip

6 years ago

Training Tip: Herd Size Matters When Introducing a New Horse

One of the biggest mistakes I see people make when introducing a new horse to the herd is putting too…

Read More