Be a Detective: Is There a Crack in Your Horse’s Foundation?

0326_Tip

Every time you work with your horse, you should act like a detective, trying to figure out where your horse has any holes in his foundation. One question you should ask yourself during each training session is: Is there a crack in the foundation?

Invariably, as you progress your horse’s training, you’ll happen upon an area that requires you to go back and get your foundation better. Admittedly, this will happen more often at the beginning of your horsemanship journey as you’re working on building your experience. The more horses you work with and the more you add to your knowledge, the better you can get this learning curve down. However, this happens to even experienced horsemen. You’ll think you have something done well, but when you ask the horse for a more advanced maneuver, he’ll let you know you’ve got a hole in your foundation and he needs more help.

There’s no shame in realizing there’s a hole in your foundation and going back and fixing it. The only problem is when your foundation isn’t strong and you ignore it and continue pushing the horse. That isn’t fair to him and is just setting him up for failure. When you get into trouble, always go backwards, not forwards.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1006_Tip

6 years ago

Training Tip: The Importance of Protecting Your Personal Space

As a trainer, you need your horse’s respect and attention in order to teach him and gain his trust. Establishing…

Read More
0804_03

6 years ago

Meet the 2020 Clinician Academy Students: Nada Johnson

Georgia horseman Nada Johnson is looking forward to attending this year’s Clinician Academy. Since discovering the Method, Nada has been…

Read More
FILES2f20152f082f0811_03.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Frankfort, Kentucky Fundamentals Clinic

Great horsemen possess three qualities: feel, timing and experience. The only way to get good feel and timing is through…

Read More
0722_02

9 months ago

Meet Method Ambassador Jessica Shepherd

Jessica was raised on a dairy farm in northern Minnesota, where she grew up trail riding with her family and…

Read More