Don’t Bore Your Horse To Death

 

Once your horse understands an exercise, it’s important to move on. There’s nothing horses hate more than being forced to do the same exercise every single day. Humans are the same. Imagine if when you were in school your teacher never got past teaching you the alphabet. Every day, she’d drill on the same lesson. You’d get bored quickly and start to resent even seeing her. The same theory applies to your horse. If your horse has the roundpenning exercises down, get him out of the roundpen and introduce new exercises to him. Don’t nag him to death. All of the groundwork exercises are designed to earn the horse’s respect and build his trust in you as a leader. Continually driving your horse around in circles is only going to cause him to get sour. Lots of horses develop bad attitudes when they are forced to do the same exercise over and over.

If your horse is developing a sour attitude, be sure you’re introducing new exercises, mixing things up and giving him a purpose for doing the exercises. That’s why I built the obstacle course at the ranch – it allows me to fine-tune the groundwork exercises without boring the horses to death. Now, just because the horse understands a particular exercise, it doesn’t mean you won’t ever come back to the exercise. You’ll certainly still practice it, but maybe only twice a week, and you can keep it fresh by incorporating obstacles.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0504_Tip

5 years ago

Training Tip: Use Voice Commands With Caution

I don’t encourage people to use a lot of voice commands, especially in the Fundamentals level of the Downunder Horsemanship…

Read More
1129_02

4 years ago

Ship Your Gifts In Time

If you’re buying gifts for the holiday season, this is your friendly reminder to get your shopping done in the…

Read More
1210_04

7 years ago

Clinton’s Bit of Choice

When starting the Method, Clinton encourages horsemen to use a snaffle bit to train their horses. “If you want to…

Read More
0411_Tip

9 years ago

Training Tip: Take Your Horse’s Experience into Account

Be smart about the trails you take your horse on, being sure to take his experience, your experience and the…

Read More