Your Horse Testing Your Leadership Comes Naturally

0809_Tip

It’s very natural for horses to establish a pecking order. More often than not, the top horse in a herd is usually an old broodmare. How’d she get control of the group? She proved to every horse in the pasture she could move their feet forwards, backwards, left and right. When the broodmare wanted another horse in the pasture to move out of her way, she’d approach him with a plan. First, she’d pin her ears back. If the horse ignored her, then she’d bare her teeth and act like she was going to bite him. Then she might actually try to bite him. If he still didn’t move away from her, she’d back up to him, swish her tail and act like she was going to kick him. Then she might actually kick him. And she’d keep kicking until he moved. Whoever moves first, and backs down, loses the battle.

On a daily basis, horses in that broodmare’s herd will test her ability as a leader and question her authority, and she’ll have to prove to them that she’s still capable of being the leader and moving their feet. The same is true in our relationship with our horses. Every day, we have to prove ourselves worthy of being the leader in the relationship.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0724_02

7 years ago

Contest: How has Titan Inspired You?

When Clinton released the “Titan: A Legend in the Making” YouTube series to the public in December 2015, Titan quickly…

Read More
IMG_2276

8 years ago

Recognizing Our 2007 No Worries Club Members

This year, we’re celebrating 10 years of the No Worries Club, and we want to recognize the horsemen who have…

Read More
FILES2f20152f052f0512_02.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

The Most Important Step

Clinton and his clinicians are in the thick of instructing a 10-day Fundamentals Clinic at the ranch. The group of…

Read More

13 years ago

Training Tip of the Week: Don’t let your foal get pushy.

  Letting foals get pushy and dominant is the biggest mistake I see people make with young horses. Someone will…

Read More