Teach Your Horse to Circle Like a Pro

0409_01

While loping a horse in a circle may seem like an easy thing to do, it’s fairly difficult to achieve when riding one-handed on a loose rein. To prepare his horses to lope and eventually gallop circles in a reining pattern, Clinton uses the exercise “Circle ‘N Circle” to lay a foundation that he can build on as the horses’ training progresses.

“I introduce the exercise when my performance horses have 60 to 90 rides on them. It’s a foundation-building exercise designed to teach a horse to lope a symmetrical circle while staying soft in the bridle and not leaning in or out of the circle,” Clinton explains. “Circle ’N Circle is similar to the Intermediate riding exercise Post ’N Circle, but this exercise is more advanced and instead of working on straight lines, it focuses on circling with an emphasis placed on the horse staying soft in the bridle and through his body.”

In the summer 2019 No Worries Journal article, “Performance Horse Training: Circle ‘N Circle,” Clinton shares how to teach the exercise to your horse.

Read the article now by logging on to the Downunder Horsemanship app or the No Worries Club website. The article starts on page 80 of the journal.

A complete library of our quarterly No Worries Journals is available for viewing and downloading on the No Worries Club website and the Downunder Horsemanship app. If you’re not a club member, learn more about the many benefits of being a club member and join our community on our website.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1017_Tip

8 years ago

Training Tip: Personal Space and Safety

The safety category of respect refers to your personal hula hoop space. This space is a 4-foot circle that surrounds…

Read More
1225_05

7 years ago

Our Clinicians and Ambassadors Train Horses for the Public

You know that Clinton offered a beyond-compare training program for problem horses, colts that needed started under saddle and older…

Read More
0920_tip

10 years ago

Training Tip: Keep Lessons Interesting for Your Horse

Once your horse understands an exercise, it’s important to move on. There’s nothing horses hate more than being forced to…

Read More
0111_01

4 years ago

We’re Looking Forward to Our First Tour of 2022

When the first weekend of April hits, our team will be in Franklin, Tennessee to hold the first Walkabout Tour…

Read More