Training Tip: Forward Motion is Established on the Ground

1022_Tip

Although it may seem odd, your horse’s responsiveness when you ask him to move forward under saddle (his gas pedal) is established on the ground, beginning with the roundpen exercises. At Fundamentals Clinics, we begin by working with every participant and their horse in the roundpen. I can tell by the way the horses react in the roundpen which ones have a good gas pedal under saddle and which ones don’t. The horses that move off as soon as their owners cue them by pointing their fingers in the air move out well under saddle. The ones that lazily flick a cigarette butt at their owners have the same attitude when it comes to riding. That’s why we get that behavior sorted out and corrected on the ground before we even get in the saddle.

Even if you think your horse has a good gas pedal on the ground—he moves forward when you cue him—you should test him every once in a while to be sure there isn’t any stickiness in his feet. For example, if you’re working on Lunging for Respect, when your horse is cantering around the circle, point up in the air and ask him to speed up. A horse with a good gas pedal picks up his pace while a horse with a sticky gas pedal will flatten his ears and kick out. Horses get good at fooling us and put in just as much effort as necessary to keep us happy, but when you start testing your horse, you might be surprised by what you find.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1025_Tip

4 years ago

Training Tip: Help for a Horse That Won’t Stay in a Stall

Question: My 16-year-old Appaloosa/draft mare won’t stay in a stall. She jumped a 4-foot stall gate from a standstill. After…

Read More
0218_01

6 years ago

Hulk’s Second Training Session in the Reined Cow Horse Series Available for Members

During Hulk’s second filmed training session, Clinton focuses on the Advanced level exercise Rollbacks in the Corner. Clinton is filming…

Read More

14 years ago

Get Critiqued in the Method

Ever wish you could borrow just five minutes of Clinton’s time to tell you if you’re on the right track?…

Read More
NWCfind

8 years ago

Find It on the No Worries Club: Terrified of Water

A No Worries Club member asks Clinton: My horse is terrified of crossing water. How can I get him over…

Read More