Training Tip: Why You Should Get Your Horse Outside of the Arena

1221_Tip

No matter which category your horse falls into – he’s cold-blooded and on the lazier side of the scale or hot-blooded and more sensitive – one of the best things you can do is ride the horse outside of an arena. Riding outside gives cold-blooded horses a reason to go somewhere. They’re already unambitious as it is, so when you close them in an arena with four walls and they’re forced to see the same four walls every day, it de-motivates them even more. But when you get them outside and actually give them a place to go, it motivates them and adds a little spark to their step.

Riding outside is also good for horses that tend to be grouchy or sour because it keeps things interesting for them. The worst thing you can do with these types of horses is drill on the same exercises in the same boring arena every single day. By taking them outside, you can keep practicing the same exercises and train on them as much as you want, and because the environment is new and interesting, they don’t seem to get sour about it.

Training on the trail is also good for hot, nervous horses because it gets them exposed to all sorts of different objects, situations and environments. The more they’re exposed to, and eventually get comfortable with, the more their comfort zone expands.

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

More News

Back to all news

See All
1011_01

9 years ago

Fundamentals in Paso Robles

26 individual Fundamentals groundwork and riding exercises learned 24-plus hours of instruction, covering the first level of the Method Horsemen…

Read More
FILES2f20152f072f0728_02.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Tunica, Mississippi Fundamentals Clinic

26 individual Fundamentals groundwork and riding exercises learned 24-plus hours of instruction, covering the first level of the Method 20…

Read More
0214_Tip

9 years ago

Training Tip: Incorporate Waiting Periods into Your Training

If you want your horse to wait for your cues and be patient, you have to practice. Whatever you practice…

Read More
0310_05

6 years ago

The Importance of Warm-Ups Before a Training Session

The first 10 minutes Clinton gets on a horse, he focuses on nothing but seeing where the horse is at…

Read More