Training Tip: Disengaging vs Engaging Your Horse’s Hindquarters

0517_Tip

To be effective when training your horse, it’s important to understand the difference between disengaging the horse’s hindquarters and engaging them. I tell people to think of the horse’s hindquarters like the gas pedal of a car. The hindquarters are where all the horse’s power comes from.

When you disengage a horse’s hindquarters, asking him to cross his inside hind foot in front of his outside hind foot, you’re actually taking away all the power in his hind end. You teach him this from the very beginning of his training with Fundamentals exercises such as Yielding the Hindquarters and Yield to a Stop so that you can quickly gain control in an emergency situation. As you work your way through the Method and reach the Advanced level, you’ll have a respectful, willing partner and won’t have to worry about your safety. At that point, you can start teaching the horse to engage his hindquarters, which will actually increase the power in his hind end. When you engage a horse’s hindquarters, you’re pushing his hip up underneath his body so that his shoulders are elevated and it’s easy for him to perform a maneuver such as a lead departure or lead change by driving from his hind end.

When working on engaging the horse’s hindquarters and asking him to push his hip up underneath his body, make sure that you aren’t pushing his hip way over to the side. If you do, you’ll be disengaging it and taking his power away. When you push his hip up too far, all his weight has to fall on his front end because he can no longer balance on his hind end, which makes a maneuver such as a lead departure very difficult and frustrating for you and the horse. So instead, push his hip up at no more than a 45-degree angle so that you’re driving his hind end forward underneath his body, putting him in a power position that he can use to elevate his front end and drive from behind.

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

More News

Back to all news

See All
1119_Tip

7 years ago

Training Tip: Your Horse Does Not Think The Way That You Do

One of the most difficult concepts about training horses to get across to people is that horses do not think…

Read More
0327_05

8 years ago

No Worries Club Contest: Run Up & Rub Challenge

Our next No Worries Club contest is all about the Intermediate exercise Run Up and Rub — we want to…

Read More
0501_04

8 years ago

Congratulations to Our Contest Winners!

We loved the creativity No Worries Club members used in our Run Up and Rub Challenge, a contest held for…

Read More
0207_06

9 years ago

Train on the Trail With Clinton by Your Side

The biggest misconception about trail riding in Clinton’s opinion? “That every horse should be a good trail horse. Most people…

Read More