Training Tip: When to Add Speed to a Reining Horse

0213_Tip

Question: How do you decide when it’s OK to add speed to a horse’s training? I’m training a reining horse and have what I think is a good foundation on him. I know in order to be competitive that I need to speed him up, but I’m not sure when I should do that. – benjean

Clinton’s Answer: To me, knowing when to add speed to a horse’s training is a mental game. If you start galloping a horse too quickly in his training, it’ll make him unravel and lose his mind. When you get a horse moving fast, his adrenaline spikes, and if he’s not mentally prepared to handle it, it’ll make him nervous and even frighten him. It’ll get his motor running too much. This is especially true with hot-blooded horses, such as some bloodlines of Quarter Horses, Thoroughbreds, Arabians, etc.

I generally start working on speed control with my 2-year-olds eight months into their training. I practice speeding them up and slowing them down on a big circle. Every month, I just ask them to go up a notch. By the middle of a horse’s 3-year-old year, he is moving at a pretty good clip. He’s not going as fast as he can run, but he’s easing into it.

What you don’t want to do is go from 10 miles an hour to 35 miles an hour in one training session. Let the horse tell you when he’s ready to go faster. How do you know when he’s ready? He’s listening to you and he’s relaxed.

Have a horsemanship question or looking for more training tips? Check out the No Worries Club.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1030_Tip

7 years ago

Training Tip: Prepare Your Horse for Obstacles

You don’t need to have a big fancy obstacle course at your disposal to introduce your horse to a lot…

Read More
0909_01

2 months ago

Final Walkabout Tour in the Books

This past weekend in Waterloo, Iowa, we closed the chapter on an incredible era in Downunder Horsemanship’s history with our…

Read More

13 years ago

They Share Your Passion

Clinton Anderson Certified Clinicians have studied the Method extensively and have honed their sense of feel and timing to gain…

Read More

13 years ago

The Fundamentals is the Answer

My horse bites me. My horse kicks. My horse bucks. My horse canters too fast. My horse won’t move forward….

Read More