How to Break a Horse

 
   
       
go to home pageKeith Hosman's biosend us an emailJohn Lyons links and morestep by step horse training email
go to: homepage go to: homepage go to: homepage
 
 

Sign Up Today!

If your horse is buddy sour or won't speed up, slow down, or pick up its leads, you missed the latest training methods from John & Josh Lyons. Sign up here to get step-by-step lessons emailed every month free.

country

Note: We will not sell you out to spammers.

Sample Our Newsletter
"How Long Should I Ride?," Issue 2, part 1 of our FREE monthly newsletter

From our Horse Training Problem Series:

A person is able to keep his attention span for about 20 minutes before something else enters his head. The coffee pot he left on will come flying into his head. A saddle sore, his wife, something. So the best amount of time to ride a horse is for about 20 minutes, then give yourself a 10 or 15 minute break and ride for 20 minutes again. If you know you're going to work for 20 minutes, then you can focus and stay working hard for 20 minutes. But during that twenty minutes, you want to make something better. Ask yourself "What can I make better?" Find one thing and work to make it better.

"The key to training is to find improvement in what you're doing. That's what keeps you going, what keeps you wanting more. You should never be satisfied with what you've got or what you've done. "Satisfied" is another word for "content" and that's another word for "quitting." Then you can't go any farther. So never be satisfied and you'll find that there's always more to it, there's always more to want.

"Always raise your expectations. The whole time you're riding, you need to be looking for…

(sign up / read more)

 

From John Lyons Trainer Keith Hosman

 
 

Stop Bucking Study Course
A Downloadable Book

A sample from Day 5:

Exercises and “concepts” are tools that go into your mental tool box. I can’t simply say “Do X, Y, Z and your horse will be fixed” because every horse and situation is different. What if I said you need to despook your horse - but it’s not bucking out of fear - but out of disrespect? What if I said practice working in the arena - and you’ve never been in one? The point is to break things down and figure out which tool(s) to use. You don’t use every tool at home to replace a window and you don’t use every training concept to fix every horse. (And sometimes we have to change our plans when we realize it’ll take a crescent wrench when we thought pliers would do.)

- Print out from home
- 5 Days, 5 chapters
- Learn at your own pace

Just $4.99

For more info:
this course | all courses

Available Downloads:
"Stop Bucking"
"Rein/Speed" (for Nervous Horse Owners)
"Round Pen First Steps"
"Trailer Training"

 

clinic infowhat people say about our clinicsshop online
browse article archiveperuse articles from outside writersfind training by relevant topicsee past issues of the newsletter5-day study courses, download then print outlisten to training online
  
   
 
 
   
Lyons Training 101

Issue Number:  Five
If Your Horse Ain't Broke - Fix It!

written by Josh Lyons & Keith Hosman
 
Issue Five, Part 3 of 4
Speed Up Your Slow Horse

 


Print This Article (This is a large file that will take a moment to load. Note: the article might be paired with another.)
Tell A Friend (Click to send them an email)
Link to this Article (Click for code and instructions)
& lead directly to your country's eBay site for current listings of related products selling near you
Find this article faster next time:  

One of the hardest things, is that as you ride your horse, the more you mess with the bit, the more you restrict movement. You're restricting movement every time you pick up the rein. If I have a horse that doesn't want to move and I pick up that bit, restricting his movement, then it's going to take more drive from me to keep this horse wanting to move. It actually makes it harder for me to keep the horse moving through it, but he's actually learning it better.

Controlling Your Horse's Speed

• control your speed
• walking or loping
• home, trail, arena
• novice to advanced
see more

       

Buy now: $38.99

Here's what to do when your horse "won't go."

You can fix the lazy horse as you ride through any exercise. The first thing that makes a horse responsive or lighter is having a clear cue from you, the rider. A cue is something that you ask the horse and can get the horse to do. That means a cue to stop will be picking up the . That would be a cue to stop. A pre-cue is something you do before the cue. A pre-cue is "ho." If I ride forward and I say "ho," and he doesn't stop, I'm going to say "ho" and pick up the reins to say "That meant stop." So pretty soon, when I ride forward and I say "ho" the horse stops. So a pre-cue is something you do before a cue that makes a horse lighter and more responsive. It's the same thing with your legs. What do you do before you use your legs? You sit forward, pick up the reins, kiss to them. But what's the first that you do before you squeeze or kick your horse? You take your legs out. You take your legs out, then you bring them together. So practice that. Practice taking your legs off and if he doesn't move, then tell the horse "Hey, that meant move" with a kick. And when you bring them together, be prepared to kick until something happens. So practice that and pretty soon, when you take your legs away from the horse's side, that'll mean "move forward." So I'm not using my legs to keep kicking my horse. Practice this and remember, when you bring them together, bring them together hard enough to get a change of leg speed. If you kick him and you just kick him to keep him going, then it's only going to get worse. When you kick, something has to change. They don't have to run all out for an hour, but just for a split second. When I ride, my legs mean "give me a change of leg speed." They don't mean "just go forward" and they don't say which direction. They just say give me a change of leg speed. The tells them the direction. My seat tells them the direction. Say you're backing up, and the horse isn't backing up fast enough, then use your legs to say "Give me a change of leg speed." My legs mean, not to walk, not a trot, not to lope, they mean give me a change of leg speed. Every time you use your legs, make sure your horse gives you a change of leg speed. Not just a continued walk or a continued trot, but a change of leg speed. If you can take your seat and tell your horse to go faster by sitting up, then why can't we do the same thing and use our seat to tell the horse to go slower? Our seat does. If we sit down and ride slower, and he doesn't ride slower, then I can pick up the reins and say "Hey you missed it. Back there was a cue." Remember, your horse is learning the whole time you're riding.

To help your horse understand, it's important that you offer a strong pre-cue. Sit forward, kiss to her, pick up the reins, do something. Offer a strong pre-cue so your horse understands better.

The second part of this is to give your horse a chance. Hesitate before you kick. And if he moves, don't kick. If he doesn't move, then bring your legs together hard. Say "Hey, that meant move." It's better to do that than to keep bumping him all the time with your legs, to keep kicking up. If you go to use your legs, bluff first. Act like you're going to use them the don't use them. That's how you get your horse responsive off your legs, you bluff. The more you use them, the more he's learning to lay on your legs. The more you use them, the more he's learning to become non-responsive. So you want to use your legs less. But when you do use them, use them hard enough that you make something change. Otherwise I'm just going to keep kicking him to go and pretty soon he's going to learn start thinking "I get kicked if I go, I get kicked if I stop… I might as well stop."

Your horse should be learning to hold the gait. If you're riding and he's slowing down and you think he's just about to break from a trot to a walk, don't kick him. You wait. Wait until he breaks into the walk. You're not trying to keep them in the gait, you're trying to teach them to hold that gait. You're saying to the horse "Stay in this gate until I tell you otherwise. I'll tell you when to stop trotting. Or I'll tell you when to change directions. Or I'll tell you when to speed up or when to slow down. But if I leave you alone, stay in that gait until I tell you otherwise. I don't kick him to keep him going. If he stops and I have to kick them, then I'm going to kick him hard enough that he jumps, that he gets moving, that his feet change speed. And not to the speed I want, they've got to go more than the speed I want. So, if you want to get them off your legs, then use your legs less, but use them more assertively when you do use them. When you use them, you make a commitment. If you kick this hard, you've got to keep kicking that hard, until they move or change their leg speed. So prepare yourself; you may be kicking for four hours.

If you're doing this exercise and your horse is getting lazy off your legs, hesitate for about one or two seconds; bluff like you're going to kick them. Ride and when your horse breaks down its leg speed, then you act like you're going to kick him and if they don't move, then you kick him hard. Keep kicking until they move. It'll only take about three times and you'll see a difference.

End of Issue Five, Part 3
 
 

 

***

 

Read previous article: Slowing Your Horse

Read next article: Riding Mechanics and Bad Habits

See Complete List of Articles

***

 

Related Letters
 

See related Questions & Answers (letters from readers like you)

 

back to top

 

***

Disclaimer: Equine training can be a hazardous activity which may subject the participants to possible serious injury. Keith Hosman, Josh Lyons, Patrick Benson and their associates will not assume any liability for your activities. Our newsletter, books and videos provide general information, instruction and techniques that may not be suitable for everyone. No warranty is given regarding the suitability of this information, the instructions, and techniques to you or other individuals acting under your instructions.

All Rights Reserved (TM) 2008, horsemanship101.com
No part of this website, including newsletter material and photos, may be reproduced without our express written permission.


Get the performance and relationship with your horse you desire. We'll automatically let you know when a clinic's coming to your area when you sign up for our free training newsletter, (upper-left sidebar, this page).

book equipment essential horse tack | wholesale western tack | used english tack | english tack shop | horse tack auction | miniature horse tack supply | equipment farrier | horse tack co | horses riding equipment | horse barn equipment | cheap horse quarter sale | ranch gelding for sale | mini horses for sale | palomino quarter horses for sale | horse for sale by owner

 

 

Lyons Training 101: Issue Five, Part 3
"How to Break a Horse: Speed Up Your Slow Horse"
bookmark Horsemanship101.com for more info

 

AUDIO CLIP
Listen to Josh Lyons

Click Josh's picture to play
"Horse That Wont Move"

Horse That Wont Move

Note: Audio clips are large files and may take several moments to load.

Read Josh's bio

 

Josh Lyons

One of the most sought-after clinicians in his own right, John Lyons' son Josh has produced a winning DVD series for the performance horse owner.

 

Josh Lyons Foal Handling
Buy today: $38.99


 

Josh Lyons Teaching Tricks
Buy today: $38.99


 

Josh Lyons Spins and Shoulder Control
Buy today: $38.99


 

Josh Lyons Leads and Lead Changes
Buy today: $38.99


 

Josh Lyons Sliding Stops and Rollbacks
Buy today: $38.99


 

Josh Lyons Teaching Series
Buy today: $158.99



Essential John Lyons

There are certain products that every long-time Lyons fan carries in his equine tool kit. They're the "gotta haves." Here are a few essentials - as recommended by this John Lyons Certified Trainer, Keith Hosman.

 

Bringing Up Baby
Buy today: $23.99

Help Me Help My Horse
Buy today: $25.99

John Lyons Reins
Buy today: $41.99


John Lyons Audio

Don't waste another moment sitting in traffic! Listen to John Lyons discuss simple solutions to common horse problems.

 

Conversations with John Lyons
$98.00


 

Fear in the Rider, Fear in the Horse CD
$28.99


 

Getting Your Horse's Attention CD
$28.99


 

Horse That Bites, Abused Horse CD
$28.99


 

Sensitive Ears, Mouth, & Feet CD
$28.99


 

The Calm Down Cue CD
$28.99