Horse Trainer
Is
Your Horse Ready
To Ride For Today?
My friend and horse trainer Jim Rea is big on making
sure your horse says "Yes" to letting you ride him for
the day. He uses horse trainer riding safety.
You should learn to ride horses safely with smart
horse training.
First, look to see if your horse is saying Yes.
How do you know your horse is saying "Yes!"?
Essentially, your horse is saying yes when he says he
trusts you, that he's not feelin' spooky, and that you
can stop him if you need to.
Now the next question is this.
How do you know he says he trusts you, he's not feelin'
spooky, and that you can stop him?
Ahhh...that's the part we gotta know.
Although I can't explain it in detail in an email (my
fingers would lock up from typing so much)...I'll give
you a good summary.
First, bond with the horse when you first greet him
for the day. Be sure you bond in a way that he knows
you're the leader.
Second, do some take and give. Get your horse to yield
in a couple quick exercises to make sure he willingly
yields.
Third, use the intimacy technique. Basically, you will
touch the horse in places that would normally be hard
to do because being a prey animal makes him nervous.
But taught and done correctly, this is good test to
see if you're in safe mode for riding. In other words,
if your horse lets you handle him in this manner, he's
saying he trusts you.
Fourth, you'll have him do a little dance. It's not
"really" a dance. But it kinda looks like it when you
have him do this simple lunge.
After a couple easy circles, pull the lead rope to
create a One-Rein Stop.
When doing it, you disengage his hindquarters and look
for him to cross the inside rear leg in front of the
outside leg as he disengages.
Once disengaged, ask for another bend of his neck in
the One-Rein Stop fashion. When he gives, loop the
rope around his butt. Gently pull and the pressure on
his rear end creates a little discomfort. He'll move
out and away from that.
Disengage hindquarters again. Ask for another neck
bend.
Done.
Fifth, try a few things to check his sensitivity meter
such as slapping a rope on the side of a metal wall
while you and the horse are by it. (If you don't have
a metal wall, do something that would pique his fear
level and check his reaction - don't over do this)
See if he's extra skittish, fairly calm,...?
If he's pretty calm, you're doin' good. If not, it's a
sign to you to be on your guard but not so much that
your horse can read your body language as fear.
That'll make him fearful.
Lastly, get in the saddle. Flex his neck to both
sides. If does it well, you're in pretty good shape.
If he doesn't, keep workin' at it some.
If he's never done it well, you need to work with him
and get him doing it with very little pressure. ( four
to six ounces tops)
After flexing the neck, have him step out and turn him
to a direction you want to go. Check his turning and
stopping.
Do it in a walk.
If he doesn't do it well in the walk he'll have even
more trouble when moving faster - thus, beware.
Why do all this?
It tells you what you can more or less expect when you
go for a ride.
It sounds like a lot to do, but it really doesn't take
all that long and it's well worth the effort.
Besides, it'll show you where you need to work on your
horse...if you need to, that is.
Jim Rea who showed me this is our February trainer for
Super Stars of Horse Training.
In the February DVD, you'll see a very detailed
instruction on how to do this. (If you're a member,
that is.)
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