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Every
Rider IS a Trainer Every Time
They
Interact With Their Horse
by
Cheri Wolfe
I am afraid most backyard horse owners and more than a few people that claim to
be 'trainers' actually understand how horses 'think' and what constitutes
'effective' horse riding and training. Few
understand how horse behavior actually works.
An effective trainer (or rider) looks at EVERY ride as a training session. An
effective rider goes into every ride with a plan and fully expects the horse to
be doing something 'better' at the end of that ride than it did at the end of
the last ride. This should be true,
even after a relaxing trail ride. To
expect less will result in less. Horses
seldom exceed our expectations. To
get a better outcome than you anticipated is a 'gift' and you shouldn't expect
one very often.
I frequently hear people say "But I don't want to learn how to train a
horse; I just want to have a
pleasant trail ride when I take my horse out."
Well, that is not how a horse thinks. If
you are not teaching that horse to do something better than it did before, then
it is probably learning to do something worse. It
is a steady down-hill drag until the owner HAS to address the horse's training,
has to have someone qualified fix it, turns it into a pasture pet, trades it off
or sells the spoiled beast -- frequently to the kill pen. YOU ARE A
TRAINER WHETHER YOU WANT TO BE ONE OR NOT!!!
Another mistake that novice owners and 'would-be' ineffective trainers make is
thinking that trainers have to be harsh and 'mean'. If a person effectively
trains a horse from the beginning, most horses can be trained without anyone
ever having to get after them. But,
it is NOT always possible to retrain a spoiled horse and get it to stop really
bad behavior without getting a lot rougher on it. It
depends on the individual horse, but bad behavior -- particularly dangerous
aggressive behavior - has to be stopped and the horse has to know that such
behavior has serious consequences. This
is a lot different than never letting a horse do bad things to begin with. Again,
some owner / rider somewhere is responsible for letting the horse become
spoiled. Training a green horse is
MUCH different than retraining a spoiled one. It
is SOOOO much better to never let them learn bad behavior.
It does not take long for some horses to become badly spoiled --
particularly smart ones. Everyone
wants a 'smart' horse. Some
riders are a lot better served by a horse that is not-so-smart.
These 'average' horses can be a lot more forgiving that the really smart
ones.
That brings me to some of the questions I am asked regularly:
"Why did my horse bite me?"
"Why does my horse try to turn around?"
"Why does my horse stop and refuse to go?"
"Why does my horse lay its ears back at me?"
"Why does my horse put its head down and pulls the reins through my
hands?"
"Why does my horse throw its head up?"
"Why is my horse threatening to rear?"
"Why won't my horse back up?" (Substitute trailer load, cross water,
stand tied, let me pick up his feet -- the list is endless.)
"Why
does my horse back up when I try to get on?"
Horses do (or don't do) all of these things because someone has let them do it
before or has let them do little things that led up to doing this bigger thing.
They simply do it because they can and have. They
simply do it because a rider / handler has not corrected them when they first
tried to do the behavior. WHATEVER
YOU LET THEM DO IS WHAT YOU ARE TRAINING THEM TO DO!
The difference between these horse owners and an effective trainer is that
trainers notice and interrupt the little things before they become big problems.
If a horse pushes against a bit, ever so slightly, the rider should interrupt
that push, over-correct it and demand that the horse back off the bit.
If a horse pushes a shoulder out and 'drifts' out even a stride or two, (like
toward a gate), that should be instantly countered by demanding a leg yield the
opposite direction. If a horse is to be taught to stay between the rider's hands
and between the rider's legs, the tiniest deviation has to be corrected, long
before the horse runs shoulder first to the gate or a friend or the barn or ????
They all 'push' the boundaries a little at first before they push them
big.
If a horse tries to turn around, that should be interrupted immediately and the
horse should always be turned back the direction it turned from -- never brought
all the way around even though that would get it headed back the right direction
more quickly. That is a 'win' for
the horse. To turn back is a win for
the rider and an effective correction. To
turn back abruptly and rather roughly with a heel or a spur in the ribs would be
an even more effective response, especially if this is not the first time the
horse has tried this stunt. You want
the horse to know that it is unacceptable for it to initiate any move you did
not ask for. It is MOST effective to
interrupt a behavior as it first begins. A
'good' rider 'reads' the horse and interrupts the behavior before an observer
even sees it happen. This means you
'meet' the horse and fix the problem before anyone else can even see what the
horse tried to do. A good rider can
'feel' a problem before an observer can see it. This
is what is called 'timing and feel'. Good
riders and trainers have good timing and feel.
It is like having a sixth sense. This
is the elusive quality every serious rider should strive for.
Every rider needs to remember that anything you allow a horse to do is what you
are training that horse to do -- as surely as though it was the intended
training goal.
As for rearing -- that is almost 100% the fault of the rider -- either past or
present. Horses rear because they
lack forward motion or have a fearful rider that is pulling too much on the
reins. Fearful riders cause most
rearing. They either lack the skill
or nerve to ride a horse confidently forward or they are so fearful that they
'trap' the horse between their pull on the reins and the horse's desire to go
forward or the rider's legs. A
trapped and frequently nervous horse feels that they can only escape by going
'up'. Once they rear and the rider
gets off or takes them back to the barn, they have been effectively 'trained' to
rear to get out of uncomfortable situations. It
quickly begins a spoiled horse's often fast descent to the being a pasture pet
or being seen as a 'bad' horse, when its only fault has been that it has been
ridden poorly by a rider that lacked confidence and / or skill.
Every single thing a horse does that is not exactly what the rider wants or has
asked for, should be immediately countered by some action on the rider's part
that interrupts or corrects the behavior.
On the other hand, every rider has to be fair. Riders and trainers should only
ask a horse to do what it is ready and able to do. Expectations should not
exceed the horse's mental or physical ability. If
a rider wants reasonable responses, they have to make reasonable requests and
the horse has to be ready and able to get that particular job done.
If the horse is ready and properly prepared and the request is plain (to the
horse), then the rider should not accept less than full and reasonable
compliance from the horse. In other
words, do not ask a horse to do something that you have not prepared him for and
have the time, ability and the full intention of getting done. To
fail, tells the horse that it does not have a strong leader that it can trust
and that obedience is optional. This is where most trailer loading, water
crossing, bathing, spraying, bridling etc problems begin. The more times you
fail to accomplish a goal, the less likely the horse is to do anything else you
want, either. Pretty darn quickly
you have a spoiled horse that only does just what it pleases and could care less
what a handler / rider wants it to do; or
you have a horse that has become very fearful because it does not have a strong
leader that it trusts.
Respect
is so intertwined into effective riding, that you cannot have a horse that is
comfortable doing anything the rider wants if that horse does not have absolute
respect for that rider / handler. A
strong leader is like a 'god' to a horse. They
will do anything for that person without ever questioning them.
And, that strong leader has to be fair and cannot get the horse in
trouble.
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