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Horse Training
What is horse training?
Horse training is simply being able to communicate
with and instruct a horse. This can take place
using any number of methods. In recent years, we,
the horse loving public, have become more aware of
gentler and more humane methods of training. I say
recent years, though, this is, in fact, in error.
These "new" methods have been around for many years.
Various methods have been around for as long as 2
millennia. Some early writings that we have are from
Xenophon, from the 4th century B.C. So, these
methods aren't really new, we have just brought some of
these old ideas to a new light.
There are many different methods of training horses.
One method that might work really well for a certain
horse might not work well at all for another horse. The
study of one type of training should not exclude other
types of training. While not all methods are going to be
right for one horse, this does not mean that only one
method should be considered.
I teach and study both Western and English styles of
riding. Both styles appeal to me and I study and
practice both methods. Both disciplines should be
studied to understand more about how to train our
horses.
Horse training is not the act of making the horse
do something; it is the act of training the rider to
communicate in a way the horse understands. It must
be understood that no matter how hard the rider works,
it is the horse that must, in the end, perform the
movements. From this comprehensible type of
communication comes a bond or an understanding between
horse and rider. This does not mean that we and the
horse are equal, but we, as riders and trainers, become,
in a sense, benevolent dictators. We are calling the
shots; telling the horse where to go, and, if the horse
learns and listens, all pressure is released and he is
able to relax.
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"Every rider must not only ride but also
think, as only a thinking rider will be
able to attain his goal in a relative short
time without spoiling his horse."
~Alois Podhajsky~
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Experts
If you watch any good rider or trainer work with a
horse, whatever he or she is doing will likely look
easy. They can make it look easy because they have spent
years, if not decades, perfecting their techniques and
honing their skills. This innate ability to teach a
horse is not something that shows up over night. It can
be learned, but only by practice and repetition. Then,
those skills begin to become instinct and, to us, it
comes to look like magic.
Do not be discouraged if you can't do it as quickly
or as easily as the experts. Continue practicing and
eventually, you will have your friends thinking that
what you do is magic. Like with any skill, it takes time
and hard work to perfect and more time and hard work to
make it look easy. Don't give up hope, just keep at it.
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"The novice wants the magic formula,
the secret, the trick, that will transform
him from a tyro to a skilled performer - a
permanent formula that will work on any
horse, anytime, anywhere."
~Louis Taylor~
Out of the West
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Gaited Horse Training
I train gaited horses to gait without your having to
pull on the bit or get their head set. I train
them to gait on a loose rein. As a result,
they are nicer to ride and still have the super smooth
gait that comes with the breed. Teaching it this
way sometimes takes longer though, but in the end, it is
certainly worth it for the fun of not having to pull on
the reins all the time!
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Basic Training
Colt Starting |
$135/
week |
| Advanced Training |
$155/
week |
| Recommended READING
Breaking and Training the Stock Horse by
Charles O. Williamson
Dressage: A Study of the Finer Points of Riding
by Henry Wynmalen
Ride
Western by Louis Taylor
Training the Reined Horse by Peter
Finney and Jack Brainard
If I
Were to Train a Horse by Jack Brainard
Teaching Yourself to Train Your Horse by
Richard Alexander
Step
by Step Trick Training by Jackie Johnson
Considering the Horse by Mark Rashid
A
Good Horse is Never a Bad Color by Mark
Rashid
Another
Horsemanship by Jean-Claude Racinet
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