Right click to get pictures
  "Horse Class" #14 Keith Hosman, Lyons Certified Trainer
Horsemanship101.com
The Most Dangerous Thing
Trainers - Articles - Training by Topic - Books, Video, Clothes, Tack - Saddlery

An Easy Fix for Biters
Welcome to your next issue of "Horse Class," your how-to source for equine tips, tricks and solid foundational training brought to you by horsemanship101.com and John Lyons Certified Trainer Keith Hosman.

Here we tackle biting - one of the most common horse vices and certainly the most dangerous.

You'll find the article sampled below. To read it in its entirety, simply follow the link provided or visit Horsemanship101.com/Articles.

And remember, prior issues can be found 24/7 at
Horsemanship101.com/Articles. Most can be printed out and saved for easy access later.

- - -

Jump directly to the article: Biting Horses

Quit Jigging & Slow Down!
How to Fix a Biting Horse
Did your horse tell you today that he's going to bite you next week? Will you bet your finger on that? Or your daughter's arm? Do you even know the signals? When you cinch up your horse and he pins his ears or you ask him to move away and he "purses up" his lips like he's mad, he's sending you a message. The message is simple and it's one of two things. It's either "I am the boss. Who are you, mortal, to ask me to do a dang thing?" or "I'm planning on taking over; expect a coup next Thursday."

Biting is the single-most dangerous vice your horse can have. It's more dangerous than bucking, than rearing, kicking - or anything else you can name. A horse can take off a finger, an ear or objects I can't mention in this article in an instant. If your horse has developed that habit (or you fear that it might be about to), then nip it in the bud. Establish a tough zero tolerance policy and act aggressively.

But if your horse drops an ear – is he firing a first shot or flicking a fly? Should we haul off and belt him regardless, just to be sure?

How do you know the difference between a threat and an innocent stance? As you would expect, it's just common sense. A horse that's copping a bad attitude will couple his pinned ears with other facial features or body language that anyone (or thing) would recognize as a warning. Just look at the horse's features as a whole and simply ask yourself if you've been "dissed." Does he look mad, freeze up or otherwise look irritated? What's the little voice in your head say? Did you have any doubt the last time your mother got mad at you? Same thing.

But what about "mild irritation" vs all-out anger? Again, do we belt him either way "just in case"?

The answer is that when your horse disrespects you in any way, he's taken the first step toward his own little revolution. Act accordingly. Nature has programmed every horse to expect someone/thing to be a leader. Some horses want to be the boss, others accept the job begrudgingly – but all horses expect a leader to exist. If you act the role of subordinate the horse will view that as a call to take over.

Whether your horse already bites or has just signaled that he plans on starting, we need to establish a zero tolerance policy to squash the very thought. Of course, we can't read their minds, which leaves plenty of room for error. "Is he grouchy today or threatening to bite my head off?" "Did he just give me the evil eye - or simply twitch his ear?" If he bites you and takes a thumb with it, we've got a pretty good idea that he "did bite me." But guessing calls for mistakes while reacting to the horse biting (or near missing) puts us in the position of being reactive as opposed to active. In a horse's world being reactive marks you as second banana. Where does that put you, then, when you approach a horse with a reputation for biting and you move around him, "just waiting for it to happen," deflecting the horse's every move "just in case"? Answer: It makes you the banana...

keep reading this article

 
Saddle Savings!
save on saddles
Saddles, bridles, pads, you name it- at up to 30% off!

Now available:
-
Saddles
- Saddle Pads
- Headstalls/Bridles
- Helmets
- Halters and more!

Free shipping on orders over $150 and no sales tax! (except to Indiana)
- - - - - - - - - - -
Farm ATV Savings
Farm Utility Vehicles site
Find nearby utility vehicles being sold on eBay & local ATV dealers at my site:
Local Horse Power
- - - - - - - - - - -
Sarah Palins Glasses
for Trendy Frames


- Local Eye Doctors
- Great eBay Deals
- Also: Sunglasses
& Vision Accessories
- - - - - - - - - - -
Getting Your 1st Horse
Buying a horse can be a real mine field! Here's a guide that'll take you step by step through the buying or leasing process
- - - - - - - - - - -
Bucking Horse?

My Downloadable Book "Stop Bucking" can help!

Here's a sample
from Day Five:

"Is this you? You think your horse is about to slow down so you give him a good kick? That makes sense to you - but the horse figures he got kicked for no good reason. You'll burn out your “move faster” cue quick that way. I need you to start thinking and riding differently.

Instead, continue this exercise by walking your horse forward and asking it to speed up; demand a “noticeable change of leg speed.” If your horse was traveling at 4 mph, ask for faster and make sure he does just that. It's not a maybe it's a definitely. If he doesn't speed up, kick until he does. If he breaks into the next higher gait, ease him back down and keep trying....

To read more, see
this page

5 days, just $4.99

Also available:
"Trailer Training"
"Rein In/Speed"
"Round Pen"
Get more info