Training Tip of the Week: Don’t tie a cinchy horse when saddling

 

A common mistake I see people make that can ultimately lead to a horse becoming cinchy is tying their horses when they saddle them. Whenever you tie a horse up, you take away his ability to move his feet or flee from danger. Then, if he gets scared or reactive, in his mind the only thing he can do to escape is to pull back and try to break free from the halter and lead rope. The extra pressure of being tied and getting cinched up can overwhelm more sensitive horses. If you tie up a cinchy or young green-broke horse when saddling, if he spooks or the saddle slips under his belly, you’re going to have a big problem where not only could the horse potentially hurt himself, but now getting saddled will become a major source of fear.

If you have a cinchy horse, saddle him out in an open area like a roundpen. That way he doesn’t feel trapped, and if he wants to move his feet, he can. Always set your horse up for success, not failure.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0322_Tip

4 years ago

Training Tip: When to Work on Collected Lead Departures With Your Horse

If you want to know how truly broke a horse is, watch him do a lead departure. Horses with no…

Read More
0911_01

7 years ago

Need Help With Your Horse?

Clinton’s bringing the Walkabout Tour presented by Ritchie Industries to four locations around the country this year, and at each…

Read More
FILES2f20152f052f0526_03.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

First Ambassador Course Begins

This Sunday, the 2015 Clinician Academy course officially begins with a day of orientation, which is followed by the students…

Read More
1024_Tip

8 years ago

Training Tip: Ditch Being Predictable

Predators are very predictable – they do the same thing every day. Think about yourself. What do you do every…

Read More