Training Tip: Correcting a Dominant Foal That Rears

1111_Tip

Question: Denny is very used to humans and not frightened at all. He was imprinted and we are working our way through the Fundamentals. It seems he’s pretty dominant already at 4 weeks old. He loves to be near me, but a few times he has tried to jump on me or mount me. I first noticed it when I tried to bend down to get his attention in the pen to come up to me. When he came up to me, he tried to jump on me. I was not expecting it at all. Any time I get lower than him, he rears up, trying to mount me. Are there any exercises to fix this and nip it in the bud?

Answer: At some point, most young horses get pushy. You are right to want to nip your foal’s behavior in the bud now. Although him jumping on you is fairly harmless when he’s 4 weeks old and small, once he gets older, he can seriously injure you. You need to teach him to respect you and how to safely interact with you. You’ll do that through a series of groundwork exercises.

I’ve laid out the exact steps to do that in the Foal Training Series. You’ll learn how to safely interact with your foal and teach him important skills such as haltering and leading. The series also introduces groundwork exercise covered in the Fundamentals Series but modified for foals.

One of the biggest differences in training a foal compared to an older horse is the use of steady pressure rather than driving pressure. Whenever you cue your horse to do something, you use either steady pressure or driving pressure. Steady pressure is just that, a steady, consistent pressure. Driving pressure has a beat or rhythm to it—”one, two, three, four.”

I prefer to teach foals to move off steady pressure first because it’s less intimidating to them. It’s easy to scare a foal or become overbearing with driving pressure. However, if you’re working with a yearling or older horse, chances are you won’t be able to make him feel uncomfortable enough with steady pressure to look for the right answer. This is especially true if the horse has been taught to ignore humans and is lazy and heavy.

I’d study the Foal Training Series and work your way through the exercises. If you’re consistent about working with your foal, you’ll notice that he’ll respect your space and stop trying to jump on you.

Looking for more training tips? Check out the No Worries Club. Have a training question? Send it to us at [email protected].

More News

Back to all news

See All
1116_01

4 years ago

Thank You, Dripping Springs!

We couldn’t have asked for a better event to go back out on the road with than the Dripping Springs…

Read More
FILES2f20152f112f1103_05.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Go on an Aussie Adventure With Clinton

In the spring of 2013, Clinton took on the toughest horsemanship challenge of his career – breaking in a wild…

Read More
0612_Tip

8 years ago

Training Tip: Ask Clinton: Reacting to Other Horses

Q: I consider my 10-year-old Quarter Horse to be bombproof, but she starts acting up when we trail ride and…

Read More
1108_03

3 years ago

2023 Walkabout Tour Schedule

Mark your calendars and get your tickets for the 2023 Walkabout Tour presented by Ritchie Industries! March 11 & 12:…

Read More