Training Tip: Be Careful Who You Ride With

0110_tip

When you ride your horse outside for the first time, I’ve found that it is best if you can give him a path to follow so that you can just put some steady miles under his feet. Ideally, I like to take my horses out on a wide dirt road where I can walk, trot and canter. What you don’t want to do is take the horse on a narrow trail because he’ll feel trapped and claustrophobic. And if he did get scared or overreacted to something, you wouldn’t have room to move his feet and get him to use the thinking side of his brain. Remember, anytime a horse uses the reactive side of his brain, you need to move his feet forwards, backwards, left and right to get him to relax and use the thinking side of his brain. The more changes of direction you do, the quicker the horse will use the thinking side of his brain and pay attention to you.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1122_01

4 years ago

Congratulations to Our Newest Method Ambassadors

Last week, five horsemen successfully completed the Clinton Anderson Clinician Academy and received certification as Method Ambassadors. We welcomed them…

Read More
0219_02

7 years ago

Get Off the Fence: Pursue Your Dream

If you’ve been on the fence about attending the Clinician Academy, now is the time to act! A couple of…

Read More
1030_03

8 years ago

Meet Method Ambassador Tracy Reed

Although Method Ambassador Tracy Reed grew up in the city, that didn’t stop her from dreaming about horses or hoping…

Read More
0116_Tip

2 years ago

Training Tip: Horse is Resistant to Lateral Work

Question: My Thoroughbred is fine when I ask him to move forward. However, when I apply leg pressure to any…

Read More