Colt Starting vs. Fundamentals

FILES2f20152f072f0728_06.jpg.jpg

I want to break my colt to ride using the Method, should I get the Colt Starting Series or the Fundamentals Series? That’s a common question we get asked by our customers, and the answer is, if you want to do a thorough job, you’ll need both. If you’re on a tight budget and can only afford one kit at a time, get the Fundamentals Series to start. The series will give you the tools to earn the colt’s trust and respect on the ground. The same groundwork exercises (plus additional exercises) are covered in the Colt Starting Series, just not in as much detail. By the time your horse is ready to start under saddle, you’ll have earned his respect and he’ll be a calm, safe horse. Then you can use the Colt Starting Series to prepare him for his first ride and take him safely through the first three rides and beyond. In the Fundamentals Series, Clinton does not explain how to introduce the saddle to the horse, prepare a horse for feeling a rider’s weight, how to bridle a horse, etc.; the series assumes the horse is broke to ride. The Colt Starting Series goes into great detail about all of those topics and more, such as how to transition the colt from the hackamore to the snaffle bit, handling feet, bathing and riding the colt out on the trail for the first time.

Once you’ve started the colt and have the first three rides under him, then you can pick up the Fundamentals again to teach him the riding exercises that include steering, suppling the five body parts, backing up and the start of vertical flexion.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1117_01

5 years ago

Congratulations to Our Newest Method Ambassadors!

We welcomed 12 new Method Ambassadors to our team last week during a certification ceremony to celebrate their completion of…

Read More
1020_03

5 years ago

Entries Close Monday for the No Worries Club Costume Contests

No Worries Club members have until Monday, November 2nd to get their entries posted in our costume contest. This year,…

Read More
0509_Tip

3 years ago

Training Tip: Horse is Afraid of Clippers Near His Ears

Question: My horse Winchester, a 6-year-old Quarter Horse, is afraid of the clippers by his ears. How do I teach…

Read More
0919_01

2 years ago

Thanks for Celebrating 25 Years With Us

When Clinton created Downunder Horsemanship 25 years ago, his goal was to make horsemanship safer and easier for people and…

Read More