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"How To Make Horse Training Affordable," from my FREE monthly newsletter

From the Basic Horse Training Series:

"What you should do: Diagnose the problem and form a plan. Is your horse simply being a pest as you feed him? Or is he literally trying to kill you when you enter the pen? Do you know the difference? Are you looking to improve his transition into the proper lead – or does he have a bucking fit every time you mount up? To put it succinctly, if the horse is annoying, you've got time to figure things out. If the horse is dangerous, you don't. If the horse is dangerous, you don't get on him, you don't get near him. What about the gray area in between? To decide which end of the spectrum your horse falls into ("dangerous, not dangerous") I would advise listening to that little voice in your head and you may need to do so daily. If you're about to get on your horse and that little voice says something's amiss, get back off. I realize that's no "fix," but that's not what this article's about. This is about diagnosing situations, creating plans to remedy the situations, and moving forward.

So, let's break this down. Let's say that there are five different levels you can find yourself facing: 1) My horse is going to kill me today. 2) I believe my horse is going to hurt me the next time I ask for (a lope, a halt, fill in the blank). 3) My horse makes me nervous (when I'm on the trail and he sees something spooky, for instance). 4) When I try to (bathe the horse, bridle the horse, etc.) he gets really cranky. 5) I would like to improve my horse's (lead departure, spin, etc.)."

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From John Lyons Trainer Keith Hosman

 
 

Round Pen First Steps
A Downloadable Book

A sample from Day 1:

"Stand there in the center, looking ahead. Do not follow the horse by turning your body. The horse is a prey animal. He's terrific at reading body language and assimilating the messages you send. He's programmed to believe that "he who causes the other to move his feet" is the boss. Keep that in mind and stay as still as practical. Listen to the fall of the hooves as he travels behind you. It's funny how they'll try and break their stride behind you at this point, when you're not looking. You actually want the horse to break stride (to slow to a trot or walk) at this point because it hands you a chance to correct the horse and thus tell him "this is what I'm looking for." What you're looking for is for the horse to continue to move – and in the same direction – until you tell him to stop. The horse will most likely try to change direction and that's just fine. Because, once again, it gives us a chance to tell the horse what we expect. Horses that just "happen upon" the right answer haven't learned it as well as the horse who's made a hundred mistakes first. That horse has learned 99 things that don't work and will be better trained in the long run."

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

Just $5.99

For more info:
this course | all courses

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

 

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Stable Keeping

 
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"Barns Really Are for People, Not Horses"
By Bonnie Martin

Marble floor in the entry foyer, a bronze statue of a horse as the central focal point, tongue and groove wooden walls (some covered with mirrors), hanging baskets of ferns above polished brass railings, and an indoor swimming pool off to a room on the side. Sounds like some kind of mansion, doesn't it? Well, in a way it is, but built to house horses owned by Kenny Rogers's horses back in the 1980's.

In contrast, picture a barn at the other end of the spectrum-a simple building with no frills, maybe not even four walls. Which would you prefer? Which do you think your horse would want? It may come as a shock to many people, but horses don't really care about fancy and expensive housing, or any housing at all usually. As long as they are safe and comfortable that is all that matters to them. Things that impress people don't mean anything to a horse.

If horses are kept as nature intended, in groups, outdoors, without air conditioning, heating, blankets, or body clipping they are perfectly comfortable even in weather we might not enjoy. Their bodies are designed to be comfortable in cool temperatures, and their coats fluff up to insulate them from the cold. Given a choice of in or out, most horses will choose out, even in cold weather. The main exception for most horses would be a combination of cold and wet.

My grandfather's horses, raised outside, had access to a barn year round, but the only times they went in on their own were on really cold, windy, sleety days. The rest of the time they chose to stay outside.

Think about it-a horse kept inside cannot move around and exercise to warm its muscles. It can't investigate things that arouse its curiosity or move away from things it is afraid of. In a barn, the horse is a captive. Kept inside for hours and hours at a time, many horses develop vices such as cribbing, wood chewing, weaving, stall pacing, or at the very least become very bored. Some develop physical problems due to the inactivity. We certainly wouldn't do too well in a small room for the majority of our days, so why should we expect our horses to be ok with it? And how can we expect them to come out of forced inactivity, be ridden and have the stamina and behavior we want them to have?

Barns are for people and their convenience. It's easier to have immediate access to our horses if they are right at hand and easy to catch. The horses are cleaner by not having found a favorite dirt or mud spot in which to roll. Their coats, manes, and tails don't get sun bleached and that makes them look prettier to us.

They give us a place to store feed, hay, and tack. Some barns provide us a place to lounge and socialize with friends. Barns can be a status symbol for humans because humans care about that kind of thing. Horses don't. So if all you provide for your horse is a place to get out of bad weather, and you don't trap them inside, you can rest assured that your horses are better off physically and mentally than ones kept in fancy or not so fancy jails. And you get the added benefit of not having barn chores!

Bonnie and her husband own Gemara Farm Foxtrotters located in Barnesville, Georgia. They currently have nine fox trotters of their own and practice natural horsemanship with them, and Bonnie coaches others in natural horsemanship. There are usually some fox trotters available for sale.

http://www.gemara.homestead.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Bonnie_Martin
http://EzineArticles.com/?Barns-Really-Are-for-People,-Not-Horses&id=817806

 

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If you're reading this article, you may want to check out:

 

Building or Renovating a Small Barn for Your Horse
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teach your horse to stop bucking pict

 

 

 

 

   
 
   

Horse Owning: Stable Keeping, advice for the horse owner provided by John Lyons Certified Trainer Keith Hosman

Bookmark horsemanship101.com for Horse-Keeping Tips

 
 

 

 
 
 
 

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