While I had planned on continuing the "lightness comes from letting go" post from yesterday sometimes I just have write what I have in mind.
In my years as a owner of cats, dogs, and chickens in addition to horses I often witnessed how an animal when placed in a new environment will quickly assimilate to what is considered normal by the other animals in that environment.
Given that yesterday morning when I went out feed the horses I was greeted by a very emaciated young dog with a string collar well on its way to being embedded in his neck. Of which my husband I have now decided to help find a good home I am currently witnessing the "when in doubt do as the locals do" phenomenon once again.
The moment he was brought in for his bath the resident super cat walks right up sniffed his nose and then proceeded to give him a thorough inspection. Given the take charge attitude of the cat Gus the guest dog stood perfectly still and once the cat was satisfied she calmly walked off and over the last 24 hours Gus has yet to make any moves toward either cat. (the other is less brave but upon watching him for about an hour she too resumed her regular routine)
Once Gus was clean we allowed him to watch the our two dogs while in a crate. Both of our boys gave him a sniff but quickly came back to their normal quiet selves. They ate supper, visited with both cats and settled in for the evening after spending the day outside. After supper I let all three dogs out after being sure that the resident yard rooster who lives in the backyard with the dogs was safely in bed. Our dogs showed Gus where to do his business and started to teach him the dog rules the household.
Once I let them all back inside I put Gus back in his crate since I was not in the mood to supervise and he fussed a bit since all the other animals were still outside. When it was time for bed I put our biggest dog who just turned a year old and is house broken but moves around too much on the tile and wood floors at night in his crate next to Gus and turned out the light. Gus following the lead of the "Giant Puppy" settled down and didn't make a sound all night.
Then this afternoon when I had the time I introduced Gus to the backyard rooster BB who is so confident and considers himself to be one of the dogs that he walked right up and actually made Gus take a few steps back so he could watch me through the patio doors. As of now Gus has been out back with both dogs and the rooster for nearly 4 hours.
The point of this long winded tale is that animals tend to act like those around them. So if you have really good role models for a new horse or animal to look up to the new animal will usually pick up those good habits and behaviors, often very quickly. The same goes for when you introduce a new animal to a less than well behaved group of animals.
Years ago my grandparents had a rottweiler who would chase any and all cats at his house but would share the back porch just a few feet from the cats at my parent's house when my grandparents left for vacation.
I personally often have seen this time and time again the horses that come in for training. They may be a terror with bad manners at home, and impossible to catch out in the pasture and yet after just a few days in my herd they quickly behave as well as my own horses.
Knowing this I often use my other well behaved animals to teach any new animal that comes in. When I want to clip a new horse for the first time I tie them super close to my own horses who clip very well and "show" them how I expect them to behave. The new horse not wanting to look a fool to his new friends will often accept the clippers and clip as nice as my role model horses.
On the flip side since I know that animals learn from each other I am careful to try and shelter any new animal from any bad habits my other animals might have until they are well acclimated and have seen far more good behavior than bad.
All this being said stay tuned to the continuation of "lightness comes from letting go" in the next post.
A blog dedicated to all aspects of horse; care, training, and ownership. KnP Training is inspired by the real horse life of a young horse trainer and mother in Texas.
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Monday, February 25, 2013
Lightness comes from letting go
We all want a light and responsive horse. We want a horse that reins with minimal contact. One that instantly responds to the lightest cue. We want a horse that moves off our leg instead of plowing into it. We want a horse that doesn't pull, wobble, or resist.
We all know what we want but few know how to actually achieve it.
Lightness comes from letting go... over and over and over and over again.
In order to teach a horse lightness a rider must be willing to cue their horse for what they want and back up what they say. This means a rider must first ask for a response and then back up their request by making their horse do as requested (this means increasing the leg, rein, or other pressure until the horse responds appropriately). Once the horse has properly responded to the cue the rider must then release and be willing to do it all over again.
In order to teach lightness a rider must be willing to repeat the above process until the horse responds to the cue the moment that it is used.
Teaching lightness takes time and constancy. The rider must be willing to back up every cue that they use and release the moment that the horse responds to their satisfaction.
So to achieve lightness a rider must be willing to 'check' their horse constantly.
Anytime the horse pulls to the outside of a circle, or lays into a rider's legs a rider must be willing to cue to horse to the proper response and immediately release once again.
This means that in the beginning of teaching lightness a rider may have to check their horse 10 or 15 times in a single working circle, or a few times for every simple turn.
Teaching lightness takes a "do it right every time, all the time" mentality on the part of the rider.
I will continue on this topic in my next post.
We all know what we want but few know how to actually achieve it.
Lightness comes from letting go... over and over and over and over again.
In order to teach a horse lightness a rider must be willing to cue their horse for what they want and back up what they say. This means a rider must first ask for a response and then back up their request by making their horse do as requested (this means increasing the leg, rein, or other pressure until the horse responds appropriately). Once the horse has properly responded to the cue the rider must then release and be willing to do it all over again.
In order to teach lightness a rider must be willing to repeat the above process until the horse responds to the cue the moment that it is used.
Teaching lightness takes time and constancy. The rider must be willing to back up every cue that they use and release the moment that the horse responds to their satisfaction.
So to achieve lightness a rider must be willing to 'check' their horse constantly.
Anytime the horse pulls to the outside of a circle, or lays into a rider's legs a rider must be willing to cue to horse to the proper response and immediately release once again.
This means that in the beginning of teaching lightness a rider may have to check their horse 10 or 15 times in a single working circle, or a few times for every simple turn.
Teaching lightness takes a "do it right every time, all the time" mentality on the part of the rider.
I will continue on this topic in my next post.
Saturday, February 16, 2013
The Feeding Commandments Part 2
The Feeding Commandments
Last post I laid out the 11 feeding commandments that are followed in the KnP household and I promised today's post will break down all the different commandments and how they are taught and reinforced.
I should start by saying that I teach these feeding rules to every horse that gets introduced into my herd. I use feeding time as yet another means establishing respect and control. Since horses establish herd dominance by who can move the other's feet (click the link to see what I'm talking about) and by controlling the food supply I have found that I can use feeding time to establish my place as "boss mare". And the more I am seen as the herd leader the more respectful and considerate my horses will be while I am on the ground and the better my rides will be under saddle.
I rarely have to spend more than a few days teaching a new horse the rules of feeding and after being taught I rarely have them challenged. Of course I generally do not have more than one horse at a time that does not know the rules and having other horses who know the drill so the speak can really help in the training process. For the average horse owner with several horses in need of training I recommend starting to teach these rules with a single horse and adding additional horses in a timely manner rather than starting out with the whole unruly bunch, but the process of teaching one horse is the same as teaching the whole herd at once which can be done.
1. The person feeding must be allowed to complete the task at their leisure.- When I say leisure I mean that you should be able to stop to tie your shoe and smell the roses without any horse hassling you and getting in your space. I teach this by carrying a whip with me every time I feed until the horse(s) have been respectful for several days. The more aggressive and pushy the horse(s) are the father away they have to stay from me at all times. I correct the slightest space infringement by charging (just like a boss mare) and "kicking" them with my whip (since I cannot kick like them for real I use my whip instead of hind legs to make contact when possible). I like to start with a 15ft-20ft respect circle and as the horse(s) learn to automatically keep that distance I will adjust it accordingly.
Only when all horses are a respectful distance do I proceed to dump the feed and move on. Be prepared to spend quite a while outside working on this. If you have limited time to feed start the training process on the weekend when you have time to spend working on it, and if need be you can divide up feedings and spend the greater part of a day working on establishing this respect. In my experience you may have to spend nearly an hour working on this the first time but after the initial lesson the time spent should greatly decrease to just a few minutes in just 2-4 feedings and no time at all when you are finished.
2. All horses must maintain a safe and respectful distance in relation to the person feeding and will be corrected accordingly.- Rule number 2 goes hand in hand with rule number 1 and is achieved in the same manner. I correct all personal space infringements with my body language and whip. Only after the horse(s) has settled down and is not actively trying to get in to my space do I proceed forward. I do not move forward or present feed until all horses are behaving in an appropriate manner. By an appropriate manner I mean waiting a respectful distance away facing towards me with their ears and body language in a passive and non aggressive manner.
3. No bullying or aggressive behavior will be allowed towards the person feeding or the other horses.- Any horse that tries to bully another horse while I am in the pasture will be corrected. I am the "boss mare" and when I am in the pasture no horse play will be allowed. I correct the offending horse by pushing them around with my body language and whip. At times I will feed the horse that was bullied and keep the offending horse away until they have given up trying steal the others feed before offering feed to the want to be bully. (Again I am generally teaching one horse at a time in a group that already knows the rules)
4. Feed will not be offered in general until all horses have settled down and are at or near their respective feeding stations.- I may change the feeding ordered at times (I usually feed in the order of the herd from the top horse down to the bottom) but I do not change their feeding stations. No horse will be fed at the wrong station so until they decide to go to the right place they will not be fed. Using this method 99% of the time after the feeding commandments have been established all horses will go to their respective places and wait their turn.
5. Feed will not be offered until the individual horse has settled down and is at their respective feeding station.- Same as number 4, each horse is only allowed to eat at their station. If they hassle me at the other feeding stations they will be kept off again using my whip and body language and only after they submit and go to the right place will they be given their feed. (The horse being protected tends to quickly figure out that they are "safe" and will generally happily allow you to keep the other horse off for them)
6. No horse is allowed to change stations or steal from the other horses until the person feeding has completely left the area.- Especially when dealing with two or more horses the top horse in the herd will try and steal from other horses. I correct this by keeping them off as in rule number 5. I will only leave them alone when they are at the correct station.
7. All horses must walk in front or to the side of the person feeding at all times. Horses are not allowed to "push" the person feeding from behind.- As you may have already picked up on you are basically behaving like the top horse the entire time you are in pasture. The top horse always pushes the other horses and is never pushed from behind. I make every horse walk in front of me by; using my whip, body language and by not continuing forward until all horses are in my line of vision.
8. The person feeding may easily push any horse off their feed at anytime and the horse must move away respectfully and wait until the person releases their meal.- Going back into the herd hierarchy the top horse is always able to push any horses lower than them off of their feed. Since I am the top horse I am allowed to do the same. When I get a new horse I will "steal" their feed several times at each feeding. I push them off using my body language and reinforce what I say using my whip. Only when they are at a respectful distance patiently waiting will I step away and allow them to continue eating. I do this until they respectfully move away and wait immediately. After this has been taught I will at times steal a horse's food just because I can as any other top horse would. If the horse you are working with has claimed the top place in the herd you may start this lesson by working with this horse separately until they understand the concept before trying this out in the herd.
9. The person feeding may change the feeding order at anytime and all horses must respectfully wait at their stations and not try and steal from others.- Going back to rules 4 and 5 being the top horse I am allowed to feed in any order. I enforce this rule accordingly using the techniques described above.
10. The person feeding is allowed to feed only one horse if they choose and all other horses must wait a respectful distance and not try to sneak in or bully the chosen horse or person feeding.- As with the rules above I will keep any and all other horses away using my body language and whip (eventually you should be able to do all of the above by just using your body language and should no longer need the whip, if need be I will back up what I say by throwing a bucket) The chosen horse quickly learns that they are "safe" and will allow you to move to keep all other horses away. I choose to use this technique will all of the horses in my pasture being the chosen one at least once every time I introduce a new horse.
11. The person feeding is allowed to feed all horses by hand and all horses must wait patiently for their turn and not crowd or bully the person feeding or the other horses.- After all the horses have learned the above rules and are following them to your satisfaction on a daily basis I will then at times choose to feed by hand. I do this by feeding the horses who are standing where I want them and waiting their turn and pushing away any horse that tries to bully or move into my personal space. Only the good horses get a handful and the naughty ones quickly decide to follow the rules so that they too can be fed. I correct any and all steps toward me or the other horses by pushing them back into place.
As with all of these training techniques consistency is key. I never bend the rules for any reason and I am quick to correct the slightest indiscretion. When possible after I have everyone behaving to my satisfaction I like to have other people enforce the feeding commandments so that my horses learn that the rules apply to any person that feeds. Again you and any other person you have feed must be willing to enforce the rules at any time. While the task may seem daunting a first the time you spend teaching these commandments will greatly pay off in long run when you are able to effortlessly feed in the future and they can at times be a life saver when you find yourself injured, otherwise less than able, or in need of someone else to feed for you.
Last post I laid out the 11 feeding commandments that are followed in the KnP household and I promised today's post will break down all the different commandments and how they are taught and reinforced.
I should start by saying that I teach these feeding rules to every horse that gets introduced into my herd. I use feeding time as yet another means establishing respect and control. Since horses establish herd dominance by who can move the other's feet (click the link to see what I'm talking about) and by controlling the food supply I have found that I can use feeding time to establish my place as "boss mare". And the more I am seen as the herd leader the more respectful and considerate my horses will be while I am on the ground and the better my rides will be under saddle.
I rarely have to spend more than a few days teaching a new horse the rules of feeding and after being taught I rarely have them challenged. Of course I generally do not have more than one horse at a time that does not know the rules and having other horses who know the drill so the speak can really help in the training process. For the average horse owner with several horses in need of training I recommend starting to teach these rules with a single horse and adding additional horses in a timely manner rather than starting out with the whole unruly bunch, but the process of teaching one horse is the same as teaching the whole herd at once which can be done.
1. The person feeding must be allowed to complete the task at their leisure.- When I say leisure I mean that you should be able to stop to tie your shoe and smell the roses without any horse hassling you and getting in your space. I teach this by carrying a whip with me every time I feed until the horse(s) have been respectful for several days. The more aggressive and pushy the horse(s) are the father away they have to stay from me at all times. I correct the slightest space infringement by charging (just like a boss mare) and "kicking" them with my whip (since I cannot kick like them for real I use my whip instead of hind legs to make contact when possible). I like to start with a 15ft-20ft respect circle and as the horse(s) learn to automatically keep that distance I will adjust it accordingly.
Only when all horses are a respectful distance do I proceed to dump the feed and move on. Be prepared to spend quite a while outside working on this. If you have limited time to feed start the training process on the weekend when you have time to spend working on it, and if need be you can divide up feedings and spend the greater part of a day working on establishing this respect. In my experience you may have to spend nearly an hour working on this the first time but after the initial lesson the time spent should greatly decrease to just a few minutes in just 2-4 feedings and no time at all when you are finished.
2. All horses must maintain a safe and respectful distance in relation to the person feeding and will be corrected accordingly.- Rule number 2 goes hand in hand with rule number 1 and is achieved in the same manner. I correct all personal space infringements with my body language and whip. Only after the horse(s) has settled down and is not actively trying to get in to my space do I proceed forward. I do not move forward or present feed until all horses are behaving in an appropriate manner. By an appropriate manner I mean waiting a respectful distance away facing towards me with their ears and body language in a passive and non aggressive manner.
3. No bullying or aggressive behavior will be allowed towards the person feeding or the other horses.- Any horse that tries to bully another horse while I am in the pasture will be corrected. I am the "boss mare" and when I am in the pasture no horse play will be allowed. I correct the offending horse by pushing them around with my body language and whip. At times I will feed the horse that was bullied and keep the offending horse away until they have given up trying steal the others feed before offering feed to the want to be bully. (Again I am generally teaching one horse at a time in a group that already knows the rules)
4. Feed will not be offered in general until all horses have settled down and are at or near their respective feeding stations.- I may change the feeding ordered at times (I usually feed in the order of the herd from the top horse down to the bottom) but I do not change their feeding stations. No horse will be fed at the wrong station so until they decide to go to the right place they will not be fed. Using this method 99% of the time after the feeding commandments have been established all horses will go to their respective places and wait their turn.
5. Feed will not be offered until the individual horse has settled down and is at their respective feeding station.- Same as number 4, each horse is only allowed to eat at their station. If they hassle me at the other feeding stations they will be kept off again using my whip and body language and only after they submit and go to the right place will they be given their feed. (The horse being protected tends to quickly figure out that they are "safe" and will generally happily allow you to keep the other horse off for them)
6. No horse is allowed to change stations or steal from the other horses until the person feeding has completely left the area.- Especially when dealing with two or more horses the top horse in the herd will try and steal from other horses. I correct this by keeping them off as in rule number 5. I will only leave them alone when they are at the correct station.
7. All horses must walk in front or to the side of the person feeding at all times. Horses are not allowed to "push" the person feeding from behind.- As you may have already picked up on you are basically behaving like the top horse the entire time you are in pasture. The top horse always pushes the other horses and is never pushed from behind. I make every horse walk in front of me by; using my whip, body language and by not continuing forward until all horses are in my line of vision.
8. The person feeding may easily push any horse off their feed at anytime and the horse must move away respectfully and wait until the person releases their meal.- Going back into the herd hierarchy the top horse is always able to push any horses lower than them off of their feed. Since I am the top horse I am allowed to do the same. When I get a new horse I will "steal" their feed several times at each feeding. I push them off using my body language and reinforce what I say using my whip. Only when they are at a respectful distance patiently waiting will I step away and allow them to continue eating. I do this until they respectfully move away and wait immediately. After this has been taught I will at times steal a horse's food just because I can as any other top horse would. If the horse you are working with has claimed the top place in the herd you may start this lesson by working with this horse separately until they understand the concept before trying this out in the herd.
9. The person feeding may change the feeding order at anytime and all horses must respectfully wait at their stations and not try and steal from others.- Going back to rules 4 and 5 being the top horse I am allowed to feed in any order. I enforce this rule accordingly using the techniques described above.
10. The person feeding is allowed to feed only one horse if they choose and all other horses must wait a respectful distance and not try to sneak in or bully the chosen horse or person feeding.- As with the rules above I will keep any and all other horses away using my body language and whip (eventually you should be able to do all of the above by just using your body language and should no longer need the whip, if need be I will back up what I say by throwing a bucket) The chosen horse quickly learns that they are "safe" and will allow you to move to keep all other horses away. I choose to use this technique will all of the horses in my pasture being the chosen one at least once every time I introduce a new horse.
11. The person feeding is allowed to feed all horses by hand and all horses must wait patiently for their turn and not crowd or bully the person feeding or the other horses.- After all the horses have learned the above rules and are following them to your satisfaction on a daily basis I will then at times choose to feed by hand. I do this by feeding the horses who are standing where I want them and waiting their turn and pushing away any horse that tries to bully or move into my personal space. Only the good horses get a handful and the naughty ones quickly decide to follow the rules so that they too can be fed. I correct any and all steps toward me or the other horses by pushing them back into place.
As with all of these training techniques consistency is key. I never bend the rules for any reason and I am quick to correct the slightest indiscretion. When possible after I have everyone behaving to my satisfaction I like to have other people enforce the feeding commandments so that my horses learn that the rules apply to any person that feeds. Again you and any other person you have feed must be willing to enforce the rules at any time. While the task may seem daunting a first the time you spend teaching these commandments will greatly pay off in long run when you are able to effortlessly feed in the future and they can at times be a life saver when you find yourself injured, otherwise less than able, or in need of someone else to feed for you.
The Feeding Commandments
How do your horses behave at feeding time?
Are they pushy and at times aggressive or sweet and respectful?
Can you safely and comfortably feed without separating out the herd?
Can you feed one horse out in the group and not be bothered?
At my house I have what I call the feeding commandments and every horse that comes in for training or otherwise is taught the rules from the first feeding.
The Feeding Commandments
1. The person feeding must be allowed to complete the task at their leisure.
2. All horses must maintain a safe and respectful distance in relation to the person feeding and will be corrected accordingly.
3. No bullying or aggressive behavior will be allowed towards the person feeding or the other horses.
4. Feed will not be offered in general until all horses have settled down and are at or near their respective feeding stations.
5. Feed will not be offered until the individual horse has settled down and is at their respective feeding station.
6. No horse is allowed to change stations or steal from the other horses until the person feeding has completely left the area.
7. All horses must walk in front or to the side of the person feeding at all times. Horses are not allowed to "push" the person feeding from behind.
8. The person feeding may easily push any horse off their feed at anytime and the horse must move away respectfully and wait until the person releases their meal.
9. The person feeding may change the feeding order at anytime and all horses must respectfully wait at their stations and not try and steal from others.
10. The person feeding is allowed to feed only one horse if they choose and all other horses must wait a respectful distance and not try to sneak in or bully the chosen horse or person feeding.
11. The person feeding is allowed to feed all horses by hand and all horses must wait patiently for their turn and not crowd or bully the person feeding or the other horses.
Where do your horses stand in relation to the feeding commandments? Do you and your horses follow any, some, and all of these rules?
Stay tuned for the next post where I break down the rules and talk about how you too can achieve them.
Are they pushy and at times aggressive or sweet and respectful?
Can you safely and comfortably feed without separating out the herd?
Can you feed one horse out in the group and not be bothered?
At my house I have what I call the feeding commandments and every horse that comes in for training or otherwise is taught the rules from the first feeding.
The Feeding Commandments
1. The person feeding must be allowed to complete the task at their leisure.
2. All horses must maintain a safe and respectful distance in relation to the person feeding and will be corrected accordingly.
3. No bullying or aggressive behavior will be allowed towards the person feeding or the other horses.
4. Feed will not be offered in general until all horses have settled down and are at or near their respective feeding stations.
5. Feed will not be offered until the individual horse has settled down and is at their respective feeding station.
6. No horse is allowed to change stations or steal from the other horses until the person feeding has completely left the area.
7. All horses must walk in front or to the side of the person feeding at all times. Horses are not allowed to "push" the person feeding from behind.
8. The person feeding may easily push any horse off their feed at anytime and the horse must move away respectfully and wait until the person releases their meal.
9. The person feeding may change the feeding order at anytime and all horses must respectfully wait at their stations and not try and steal from others.
10. The person feeding is allowed to feed only one horse if they choose and all other horses must wait a respectful distance and not try to sneak in or bully the chosen horse or person feeding.
11. The person feeding is allowed to feed all horses by hand and all horses must wait patiently for their turn and not crowd or bully the person feeding or the other horses.
Where do your horses stand in relation to the feeding commandments? Do you and your horses follow any, some, and all of these rules?
Stay tuned for the next post where I break down the rules and talk about how you too can achieve them.
Thursday, February 7, 2013
Short and Sweet: Your horse will only ever be as; light, willing, responsive...
Your horse will only ever be as light, willing, responsive, respectful, and easy to handle, etc as you expect him to be.
You will only get what you expect, allow, and or accept.
If you accept your horse dancing around and allow him to push on the gate when you are trying to open it your horse has no motivation to improve his behavior and stand still and wait.
So how do you stop enabling your horse's mediocre behavior?
For every maneuver and or action your horse does ask yourself, "Was this (fill in the blank) the best that he can possibly do?" And if it wasn't you need to work and practice until it is, and if you do not know how to improve it or fix it you should seek out the help of someone who does.
True horsemanship happens when you stop accepting good enough and start striving to be the best that you can be.
You will only get what you expect, allow, and or accept.
If you accept your horse dancing around and allow him to push on the gate when you are trying to open it your horse has no motivation to improve his behavior and stand still and wait.
So how do you stop enabling your horse's mediocre behavior?
For every maneuver and or action your horse does ask yourself, "Was this (fill in the blank) the best that he can possibly do?" And if it wasn't you need to work and practice until it is, and if you do not know how to improve it or fix it you should seek out the help of someone who does.
True horsemanship happens when you stop accepting good enough and start striving to be the best that you can be.
Friday, December 21, 2012
Through the eyes of a trainer (why we need horse trainers)
In this modern age the average horse person has access to a wealth of information. From magazines to books to online videos and dvds you can learn just about anything. This near limitless amount of information has gone a long way in helping everyday horse owners improve their skills and general horsemanship, but there are still some things that cannot be learned without the guidance of a skilled trainer.
I like to say that horse training is both an art and an science because unlike baking a cake you cannot just follow the directions and measurements on the package and have everything turn out perfect. Training a horse requires timing and for lack of a better word feel both of which involve constantly changing variables.
When I start a horse (I hate using the word "break") I follow a basic formula, meaning that I know what I need to do at each stage to achieve the next. I know where my horse needs to be with one skill/behavior in order to successfully move on to another. This is the type of information found in every magazine article, book, and dvd. These media sources tell you the steps you need achieve your results but they only share the big picture.
Beyond the basic formula my training takes on art like form where I am constantly using feel and personal intuition in addition to timing to achieve the results I desire. I know that every single horse I ride requires a slightly different approach. With feel and intuition I am able to determine how much each horse needs to give and do on any given day to be successful. Where Horse A may be mentally able to learn how to yield his hindquarter and his forequarter in one day, Horse B may only be ready to yield his hindquarter a single step. This doesn't mean that Horse B will never achieve the level of Horse A it just means that a single step was all that Horse B could handle that day. Tomorrow Horse B having been given time to think may surpass Horse A on the next lesson. I train by reading how my horse feels and by learning how he thinks. Using my sense of timing I release and reward according to the individual and how he is performing each maneuver on any given day.
The problem with intuition, feel, and timing is that their only constant is that they are constantly changing. You may start at one level of timing at the beginning of the ride and finish in a completely different place. You have to know when you need to go back to zero and when you are ready to zoom up to sixty and this can fluctuate back and forth in a matter of minutes and at times even seconds.
Only through experience, trail and error, and guidance by someone skilled in the art of training are you able to develop a true sense of feel. While it is theoretically possible to achieve these skills without outside help working with someone is the fastest and most painless way to achieve your training goals. Remember that every great professional rider has or has had a great mentor. Greatness is rarely achieved alone.
I like to say that horse training is both an art and an science because unlike baking a cake you cannot just follow the directions and measurements on the package and have everything turn out perfect. Training a horse requires timing and for lack of a better word feel both of which involve constantly changing variables.
When I start a horse (I hate using the word "break") I follow a basic formula, meaning that I know what I need to do at each stage to achieve the next. I know where my horse needs to be with one skill/behavior in order to successfully move on to another. This is the type of information found in every magazine article, book, and dvd. These media sources tell you the steps you need achieve your results but they only share the big picture.
Beyond the basic formula my training takes on art like form where I am constantly using feel and personal intuition in addition to timing to achieve the results I desire. I know that every single horse I ride requires a slightly different approach. With feel and intuition I am able to determine how much each horse needs to give and do on any given day to be successful. Where Horse A may be mentally able to learn how to yield his hindquarter and his forequarter in one day, Horse B may only be ready to yield his hindquarter a single step. This doesn't mean that Horse B will never achieve the level of Horse A it just means that a single step was all that Horse B could handle that day. Tomorrow Horse B having been given time to think may surpass Horse A on the next lesson. I train by reading how my horse feels and by learning how he thinks. Using my sense of timing I release and reward according to the individual and how he is performing each maneuver on any given day.
The problem with intuition, feel, and timing is that their only constant is that they are constantly changing. You may start at one level of timing at the beginning of the ride and finish in a completely different place. You have to know when you need to go back to zero and when you are ready to zoom up to sixty and this can fluctuate back and forth in a matter of minutes and at times even seconds.
Only through experience, trail and error, and guidance by someone skilled in the art of training are you able to develop a true sense of feel. While it is theoretically possible to achieve these skills without outside help working with someone is the fastest and most painless way to achieve your training goals. Remember that every great professional rider has or has had a great mentor. Greatness is rarely achieved alone.
Sunday, November 18, 2012
Food for thought- Sometimes I just can't shut up
Today I happened upon the Mugwump Chronicles and her post "Sometimes I just can't shut up" and I really enjoyed what she had say.
http://mugwumpchronicles.blogspot.com/2012/11/sometimes-i-just-cant-shut-up.html
Over the past 6 years training I have to admit that I have personally come to many of the same conclusions.
As long as a person is; trying, doing the best they know how by their horse, and is willing to learn they are always welcome here and in my real life.
When I started training I made the commitment to teach and treat others as I want to be treated and spoken to and this philosophy has given me the chance to make a real difference in the lives of numerous horses and their owners. I train/teach because I enjoy helping people grow, but I also realize that everyone grows at their own pace.
I realize that because someone does not do it exactly as I do it that it does not always make them wrong. Sure, their horse life might be better if they did a few things more like me, but maybe my horse life would be better if I did things more like them. I might mention a great article on hoof care, saddle fit, or feeding; and if things are getting out of hand I will nicely confront someone. But at the end of the day if a horse is not being staved, beaten, or abused and is instead truly loved we have enough in common to work together and be friends.
True horsemanship is not about calling names or pointing fingers; it's about sharing, caring, and being nice to one another.
Sometimes we forget that we all had to start somewhere.
Sometimes we forget that we are ALL in it for the love of horses.
http://mugwumpchronicles.blogspot.com/2012/11/sometimes-i-just-cant-shut-up.html
Over the past 6 years training I have to admit that I have personally come to many of the same conclusions.
As long as a person is; trying, doing the best they know how by their horse, and is willing to learn they are always welcome here and in my real life.
When I started training I made the commitment to teach and treat others as I want to be treated and spoken to and this philosophy has given me the chance to make a real difference in the lives of numerous horses and their owners. I train/teach because I enjoy helping people grow, but I also realize that everyone grows at their own pace.
I realize that because someone does not do it exactly as I do it that it does not always make them wrong. Sure, their horse life might be better if they did a few things more like me, but maybe my horse life would be better if I did things more like them. I might mention a great article on hoof care, saddle fit, or feeding; and if things are getting out of hand I will nicely confront someone. But at the end of the day if a horse is not being staved, beaten, or abused and is instead truly loved we have enough in common to work together and be friends.
True horsemanship is not about calling names or pointing fingers; it's about sharing, caring, and being nice to one another.
Sometimes we forget that we all had to start somewhere.
Sometimes we forget that we are ALL in it for the love of horses.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)