Take your left hand and hold the lead rope as if it's the left rein. Pull the halter slowly toward yourself.
"Concentrate. Feel how much pressure it takes to bring that rope toward you. You should feel on your pinky how many ounces it takes. Throw it back out and do it again. This time close your eyes and really concentrate. If you get this lesson, horse training gets a whole lot easier. Really focus on what it feels like. How many ounces is it taking to bring that halter back to you? Think of a specific number. How many pounds? How many ounces? One or two? 5 pounds or 5 ounces?
"How would you like your horse to be that soft? A pound or two doesn't seem so bad, does it? Actually, it's terrible. Having to put a pound or two of pressure on the rein to get it to "come back to you" is just terrible. Take the halter off the lead rope now and throw the rope back out, snap end first.
"Do the same thing, drag the snap back to you. How does that feel? It feels pretty light, right? You feel a big difference. But that's still terrible. Now take the lead rope and throw the opposite end out, the end without the snap. That feels really light. It feels like nothing. It's still terrible.
You’ll need to practice the disengagement portion until you can pick up a rein in one hand and, without pressure, the horse immediately stops and either disengages or backs up, depending on how far you’ve taken the “Three Step Stop” exercise. If you don’t practice to this point or skip it entirely, your cutting corners and not “fixing that buck.”
You might also want to read and practice “Steer the Tail.” That article is another description of disengagement, but might best be seen as offering a preliminary step, sort of setting you up for “Hip-Shoulder-Shoulder.” There is a follow-up article covering the “What-Ifs,” entitled sensibly enough “Steering the Tail, What to Do If.”
Finally, I would suggest that you print out and read the following: “What Not To Do When Your Horse Bucks.” Also, “Seeing Red... Ribbons Horses That Kick on the Trail” and “Your Horse Is Going To Spook.” We’ll discuss concepts covered in those pieces with tomorrow’s installment.
- Print out from home
- 5 Days, 5 chapters
- Learn at your own pace
& lead directly to your country's eBay site for current listings of related products selling near you
Find this article faster next time:
How many times do you think you've ridden your horse? A thousand? Five hundred? What if every time you got on, you improved something, no matter how small? If you could just see some little improvement for each of those thousand times you've been on that horse, that's a thousand percent improvement. After all, you can't get the horse trained all at once; the key is to make some small improvement every time you get in that saddle.
Your mindset, when you get in that saddle, must be that something is going to get better. Now, it might not be what you'd planned on working on because it's not a matter of what you want to work on that day – your horse decides for you. You may want to work on your right lead, but the horse says "No, I'm just going to run away." So you may not work on leads at all; you may just work on loping.
If you're just hanging out with your horse, okay, you can relax. But when you touch those reins, something has to get better. There's no "if" or "but" to it. And your horse is going to decide exactly where and on what you need to work. After all, does a teacher tell a student when the student's learned something – or is it the other way around? That's what tests are for. Tests are to see if the student has learned something. The teacher's not supposed to get mad and say "I taught you this; you're supposed to know it." They just smile and give you the "F." Letting the horse decide what you're going to work on is fundamental to good horse training.
Things I Wish I Knew
• Sacking Out to First Saddline and First Ride
• Spook in Place
• The Don't Shy Cue
• Trailer Loading
• see more
The single biggest factor in is in the rider making a change first. If the rider doesn't change, the horse can't change. The rider has to change; his expectations have to change; he or she has to expect more out of the horse. (The horse will never just give it to you.)
Have you ever had trouble picking up your lead? Think about this: The horse knows how to pick up that lead; he was born knowing how to do it. You've seen him do it without you on him while he was out there in the field. What we have to figure out is how can we ask them to do it when we're riding. That's what training is. Training is simply conveying your thought to the horse. It's taking your thought and trying to make it his thought – that's all it is. It's your idea of a give, your idea of a stop or a spin or a nice trail horse that you're trying to make his idea.
A good horse trainer makes a horse think that the trainer's idea is the horse's idea. If it's your horse's idea to stop, and I say "Okay, let's just stop," well, the horse is obviously going to stop better, isn't he? When he wants to stop or he wants to change leads or he wants to spin or he wants to jump, he's going to do it much better.
In this respect, women are usually better trainers than guys. Guys will get aggressive. The testosterone gets coursing and it becomes: "I said we're gonna do it and we're gonna do it." Rather than forcing the issue, however, a good horse trainer makes the horse think the rider's idea was really his (the horse's) the whole time. If it's the horse's idea to stop, then say "Okay, then, let's stop. Good idea."
Disclaimer: Equine training can be a hazardous activity which may subject the participants to possible serious injury. Keith Hosman, his associates, and other trainers listed on this site will not assume any liability for your activities. Our newsletter, books and videos provide general information, instruction and techniques that may not be suitable for everyone. No warranty is given regarding the suitability of this information, the instructions, and techniques to you or other individuals acting under your instructions.
All Rights Reserved (TM) 2008, horsemanship101.com
No part of this website, including newsletter material and photos, may be reproduced without our express written permission.
Get the performance and relationship with your horse you desire. We'll automatically let you know when a clinic's coming to your area when you sign up for our free training newsletter, (upper-left sidebar, this page).
There are certain products that every long-time Lyons fan carries in his equine tool kit. They're the "gotta haves." Here are a few essentials - as recommended by this John Lyons Certified Trainer, Keith Hosman.