Training Tip: Treat the Backup as Its Own Maneuver

020326_Tip

The better control you have of a horse going backwards, the better control you’ll have of him going forwards. It’s no secret that I’m a fanatic about getting my horses light, soft and supple—no matter which direction their feet are moving in. When your horse will back up and stay soft in your hands at the same time, you’ll be amazed at how responsive he’ll be going forwards as well.

From a performance perspective, while a backup may not be scored as an individual maneuver in a reining pattern, it’s certainly judged as part of the overall stop maneuver. In a reining competition, each horse automatically begins the pattern with the score of 70. The judges can either add or deduct up to one and a half points on each maneuver in half-point increments based on the quality of the maneuver.

Years ago, judges would turn a blind eye to a bad backup, especially if a horse’s stop was big. However, reining has gotten so competitive in recent years that if your horse has a big stop but he backs up poorly afterwards, the plus one you earned for the stop can quickly drop to minus one-half for the overall maneuver as a whole.

That’s why, when I’m training my performance horses, I treat the backup as if it’s a separate reining maneuver I’ll be judged on. Not only does this ensure that my horses back well after they stop, but reality is that the backup is the foundation of a stop. A horse that backs up with energy in his feet while staying soft will stop much better than a horse that braces his head and neck and drags his feet backwards.

Teaching a horse to back up well starts on the ground. We teach our horses for methods of backing up on the ground in the Fundamentals Series and then teach them the maneuver under saddle. To see how I continue to improve how my performance horses back up, tune in to the Performance Horse Series: Reined Cow Horses available to No Worries Club members. You can watch the videos in the series by logging on to the No Worries Club website or the Downunder Horsemanship app.

Looking for more training tips? Check out the No Worries Club. Have a training question? Submit it on our website.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0405_02

4 years ago

First Tour of 2022 Goes Off With a Bang!

Our first Walkabout Tour of the year drew a big crowd of enthusiastic horsemen! Over 2,000 people attended the two-day…

Read More
FILES2f20142f102f1028_03.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Hard-To-Catch Horses

If catching a horse that doesn’t want to be caught is an all too familiar scenario, the November club DVD…

Read More
FILES2f20152f092f0908_02.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Meet Our 2015 Method Ambassadors

Clinton and the Downunder Horsemanship team are proud to present our very first Method Ambassadors! Each of the nine horsemen…

Read More
FILES2f20152f092f0929_Tip.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Training Tip: Balance Out Your Training

To balance your horse so that both sides of his body are equally relaxed and responsive, you’ll spend two-thirds of…

Read More