Training Tip: Heart Attacks are Free

FILES2f20152f062f0602_Tip.jpg.jpg

One of the biggest mistakes people make when working with horses is sneaking around them and making excuses for their behavior. In reality, trying to protect a horse from objects he’s scared of only makes the situation worse. As a trainer, your goal is to desensitize your horse to as many objects that move and make a noise as you possibly can. You can’t get that done if you’re afraid to scare him. When I’m desensitizing a horse, if he wants to get scared, that’s fine by me. Heart attacks are free. As long as he stays out of my personal hula hoop space, I don’t care if he has a heart attack. In fact, on a daily basis, I try to scare my horses with objects that move and make a noise. Every time I desensitize them, I will try to do it with more intensity and with scarier objects. If I end up scaring them, that’s OK because it gives me the opportunity to make them quieter. If I can’t scare them, that’s good too, because it tells me I’m doing a good job in training them. I know that the more objects I desensitize a horse to, the bigger the thinking side of his brain will get and the calmer he will be. I can promise you this: the more you try to scare a horse, the quieter he’ll actually become.

More News

Back to all news

See All

14 years ago

Training Tip of the Week: Stopping a horse from kicking in the trailer.

  Remember that horses are prey animals and when made to go in tight, narrow spaces – like a trailer…

Read More
0425_Tip

3 years ago

Training Tip: Horse Rocks the Trailer While Going Down the Road

Question: I have a 5-year-old ex-racehorse that I have been retraining since he was 3. He has been hauled thousands…

Read More
0307_03

9 years ago

It’s Easier Than Ever Before to Find Help

Looking for a knowledgeable instructor to take lessons from or an instructor certified by Clinton to train your horse? It’s…

Read More
FILES2f20162f062f0607_Tip.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Training Tip: Should You Use a Snaffle Bit?

A lot of people wisely start the Method with a horse that’s already trained, and often times, these horses have…

Read More