Training Tip: Don’t Nag Your Horse

1103_Tip

Nagging a horse, constantly pecking at him without getting a result or failing to reward him for correct behavior, only teaches him to be resentful and dull. Imagine you’re sitting at your desk at work and a co-worker comes up behind you and starts tapping your shoulder. No matter how you respond, they keep tapping your shoulder.

That’s how your horse feels when you’re not clear on what you’re asking him to do or if you fail to recognize when he responded correctly by releasing the pressure you were applying. When you apply pressure, expect an immediate response. There are four stages of pressure: low, medium, high and extra-high. Every time you apply pressure, you do so in four beats: one, two, three, four; one, two, three, four.

With each set of four numbers increase the amount of pressure until the horse gives you the correct response, then immediately release the pressure. That’s the horse’s reward for doing the right thing. The faster you can reward him when he finds the right answer, the quicker he’ll catch on to the lesson.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1204_05

7 years ago

Organize Your Life

By Classic Equine Have you ever only had a few minutes of time to spare so you rush out to…

Read More
1002_04

7 years ago

Become a Certified Success

In 2015, Clinton introduced the Method Ambassador program, an addition to Downunder Horsemanship that has made getting the Method into…

Read More
0202_03

5 years ago

Meet Method Ambassador Ron Renard

When Ron married his wife, Geila, horses became a fixture in his life. He’d join Geila on trail rides and…

Read More
0429_Tip

10 months ago

Training Tip: Horse Only Backs Short Distances

Question: I’ve taught my horse all of the Fundamentals backing up exercises and she does them pretty well for five…

Read More