Clipping a Horse

   
       
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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 4:

"Because we can never, ever, desensitize the horse to everything that he might possibly come into contact with, your work here is not so much "rub him till he quits moving and gets used to it," as to create a "conditioned response." Show him something potentially scary, repeatedly reward him for staying put. Like one of Pavlov's famous dogs, it's a matter of exposing your horse time and time again to something spooky – and removing the stimulant before he blows, conditioning him so that his first reaction is to pause and consider – not bolt. In that respect sacking out has much in common with "Spook in Place," the major difference being that sacking out deals with objects that are likely to touch the horse (our hands, the saddle), "Spook in Place" deals with objects that theoretically keep their distance."

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

Just $5.99

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

 

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How to Clip a Horse (series)

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