|
Welcome to the November 2007 issue of "Lyons Training 101," written by John Lyons Certified Trainer Keith Hosman.
Wanna teach your horse to back easily and resistance free? That's our focus this month with an article cleverly entitled "Backing Up." You'll learn:
- How to get any horse to back up lightly
- How to get a back up with virtually no contact
- Steps to impress your friends (and enemies?)
You'll find the article sampled below. To read it in its entirety, simply follow the link provided. If the links don't work or you're not getting the emails properly, scroll to the bottom of this page. And remember, prior issues can be found 24/7 at Horsemanship101.com/Articles. Most can be printed out and saved for easy access later.
- - -
Jump directly to the article: Backing Up
|
| |
|
|
Hey, you know why your horse won't back up? Know why you can pull on those reins all day long and the horse just throws his head up and plants his back feet? The more you pull, the more "planted" you become?
A very big reason is this: Backing isn't natural to a horse. Duh. When was the last time your horse turned to his buddies and said, "Check you guys out later..." and backed away? Or backed into his shelter? Ever notice how infrequently you see them back? When they do, they kinda waddle, like ducks. Even when the big honcho mare is in their face, they'll usually pivot on their back legs and turn away. (Or push right past her FAST.) I've seen boss mares back forty feet to deliver a good kick – but Darwin would tell you she's the boss in part because she's figured out tricks like... how to back forty feet.
When you sit on your horse and think "back" and pull and pull and pull... you know what your horse is thinking? The old ones think: "How ruuuuuude" and plant their legs. The young ones just get scared and go up (as in "rear").
The horse that balks rather than moving backward isn't giving to (rein) pressure; you're pulling and so is he. And, because he has no experience backing (smoothly, at least), when you pull he doesn't know to "assume the backing position." (It's like giving the gas to a car that's in park.) Here's the most important thing you can learn when it comes to going backward: Go forward. From now on, if you even for an instant feel your horse resist as you ask him to back, get him going forward – and do so right away. Don't let him learn that balking is an option – correct that thought immediately by goosing him forward. Two fundamental John Lyons Training concepts are at play here: 1) "The horse can't decide to 'not move.'" and 2) "Get the feet to move, get them to move consistently, then get them to move consistently in the correct direction."
So he balks, you move forward and keep rein pressure till he gives to the bit and his whole body softens. Then think "back" and ask to back again. It's a lot like parallel parking on the streets of Chicago: You back in, then pull forward till you hit the guy in front of you, then backward till you hit the car behind you. Like a chicken settling onto its nest. Do that a few times and you're parked. Do the same thing with a horse that freezes when you ask him to back: First walk forward, then ask him to back. If he resists, move forward right away, keeping the pressure on the bit, till you'll feel him soften through his neck. His head should drop, his shoulders should raise; you'll feel his belly move up and away from your legs. Then give back a little rein pressure (as a reward), change your thinking to "back" and ask your horse to...
keep reading this article
|
| |
| |
"Stop Bucking" a study course by Keith Hosman
- Print out in two minutes, be training in five
- Goals, theory, homework
- Five days, $4.99
Find out more
|
| |
| |
If you're having trouble with links and want to continue reading today's edition, you'll find all issues listed here:
http://www.horsemanship101.com/Newsletter
Just cut and paste that into your browser window.
- - -
If you're using IE7 and links don't work in your emails from anybody anymore, try this: Start up Internet Explorer and click Tools > Internet Options > Programs > Reset Web Settings
That has worked for most folks. You can also try this page for further suggestions:
http://www.horsemanship101.com/
John-Lyons-Trainer-Clinics/technical2.html
You'll need to cut and paste that address into your browser window. Make sure to include both lines with no spaces.
- - -
If some of our emails reach you and some don't, here are some suggestions.
|
|
|
Perfect Christmas
|
|
- Have they got everything? How about spur straps?
From just $31.99 |
-- -- -- -- -- -- --
4 Trick Videos!
|
|
- 4 Different DVDs Make Teaching Tricks a Cinch! $39.95 each |
-- -- -- -- -- -- --
John Lyons Reins
|
|
- Get the same reins we use in our clinics for $41.99
-
Get the bit John recommends $28.99 |
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
Training by Topic
Find answers fast:
- rider confidence
- young horses
- trail riding
- bucking, rearing
- tying/pulling back
see 200 more topics
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Shop Online - Shop by Topic (solutions for fear, bucking, rearing, first saddling, etc.)
- Recommendations
|
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Does Your Horse Get Jiggy With Ya?
My Online Study
course "Rein In Your Horse's Speed" can help you fix that.
Here's a sample from Day Two:
"Snaffle Bits: Their Use in Controlling Your Speed "
"The snaffle bit is the tool you'll use to do this training most effectively. The reason is simple: The very nature of a shanked or leverage bit causes the horse to stiffen his body from nose to tail. Think of a baseball bat. Rigid and unyielding, right? Shank bits cause our horse to stiffen their bodies in the same way — making training as we've described very difficult because it causes the horse to line up all the bones in his body, one behind the other. He then uses his entire "skeletal structure" to brace against our requests. Why not make this training business a thousand times simpler by using a bit that encourages our horse to stay soft? Snaffle bits enable us to soften one part of the horse at a time; they get your horse to "unlock" and move more fluidly...."
To read more, sign up on this page
5 days, just $4.99 |
|