Keep Lessons Simple for Your Colt

1226_01

Horses are very smart, but they are simple creatures. I put horses mentally in the same age group as 4- to 6-year-old kids. Kids in this age group are very smart, they catch on quickly, but they are very simple. For example, people ask me all the time when teaching a colt the Cruising Lesson: “Shouldn’t I be worried he’s on the wrong lead? That he has his head in the air? Etc.” No, I’m not. The colt has only had three rides. He’s been loping around in the pasture on the wrong lead all his life; cantering around on a loose rein for three days isn’t going to hurt him. First, he has to learn how to carry a rider at the canter, and then we can work our way up to leads. Don’t get hung up on the details. Keep it basic. When you keep it simple, colts progress very quickly.

You can’t teach a colt 15 lessons all in the same day. You don’t teach a kid the alphabet, how to write, how to spell his name, write a sentence and read all in the same session. First, you teach him the alphabet, and when he’s good at that, then you move on. When you take your time and build on each lesson, kids catch on quickly. But if you confuse them by throwing too much information at them at one time, they shut down on you. Your colt is the same way. You have to break the information down for him so that he understands what you’re asking him to do. – Clinton

Clinton explains how he keeps lessons simple for young horses in his Colt Starting Series. The training series covers every aspect of starting a horse, from first touching a wild horse and introducing the saddle to riding outside the arena for the first time. Learn all about the Colt Starting Series on our website.

More News

Back to all news

See All

14 years ago

Foals, Foals, Everywhere

  We were blessed with a safe and healthy crop of 2012 foals. The eight youngsters are busy learning the…

Read More
FILES2f20142f062f0617_03.jpg.jpg

12 years ago

Use Your Noggin, Shop Smart

< from Downunder Horsemanship, borrow them from a friend or even rent them from a library. We love hearing stories...

Read More
FILES2f20162f042f0405_Tip.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Training Tip: Safely Bring Your Horse Back to Work

If your horse has had the winter off and you’re ready to get back in the saddle, keep these success…

Read More
0103_Tip

3 years ago

Training Tip: Let Your Horse Digest Corrections

When you make a correction and your horse responds correctly, let him think about it. Literally stop and let the…

Read More