Training Tip: Choose Where You Ride

0403_Tip

The smartest decision you’ll make in your horse’s trail career is choosing where to begin his training outside of the arena and how you build his confidence from there. The ideal location for first taking a horse outside is a long dirt road because it gives you plenty of room to move the horse forward and it gives him a straight line to follow. Beyond that, you need room to move the horse’s feet, meaning you can bend him down in circles to soften him, the ground is good enough for you to lope him, and there are natural obstacles around, such as trees or bushes, you can incorporate into your training.

The worst possible place to begin training a horse on the trail would be on a narrow path where you have no room to move the horse’s feet and you have to cross obstacles you haven’t introduced to your horse, such as a suspended bridge, water, steep hills, logs so high that he has to jump over them, etc. Putting a green horse in an environment like that is setting him up to fail and putting the two of you in a very dangerous situation.

“But, Clinton,” someone always says at this point, “that’s the only trail I have available to ride my horse on.” You have two choices: You either haul your horse to a suitable place to train him and build his confidence, or you buy a well-trained horse that will ride on a narrow trail and cross all of those obstacles. Horses do not train themselves. I cannot say that enough. Expecting an inexperienced horse to safely navigate a challenging trail is just setting him up to fail and putting the two of you in a very dangerous situation.

As your horse gets better trained on the trail, you’ll gradually increase the difficulty of the trails you take him on. Eventually, you’ll be able to ride on a 2-foot ledge next to the Grand Canyon with confidence. But it takes consistent training to get a horse to that point.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0707_04

6 years ago

Free Horsemanship Resource: Understand Why Your Horse Behaves the Way He Does

With nearly 30 years of professional experience working with horses and helping people safely train them, Clinton has become an…

Read More
0606_02

7 years ago

Walkabout Tour Roundpen Deal

In the market for a roundpen? Get a deal and save on shipping by purchasing one of the Behlen roundpens…

Read More
0714_04

6 years ago

Meet the 2020 Clinician Academy Students: Chase Tipton

Tennessee horseman Chase Tipton will be one of the students in attendance when the Clinician Academy gets underway at the…

Read More
0816_03

10 years ago

Train at the Ranch’s World-Class Facility

350-foot diameter outdoor round arena 150-foot x 300-foot covered arena Six 50-foot outdoor roundpens Obstacle course with over 25 challenges…

Read More