Training Tip: The Foundation of Control

0913a_tip

A respectful horse is a willing horse. When you ask him to move, he instantly moves. When you walk, he walks beside you like a shadow. When you go in his stall, he gives you two eyes and comes to you — he wants to be your partner. Every time your horse pins his ears back, tries to kick you or bite you, steps on your foot or pushes you out of his way, he is being disrespectful. Many people won’t let another human take advantage of them, but they will allow a half-ton animal to push them around. Allowing a disrespectful animal to invade your space creates a dangerous situation. Respect must be established from the very first day you work with your horse. He should be respectful of you, and you should be respectful of him. It’s a two-way street. Respect is the foundation of control — without it, you won’t be able to control your horse and he won’t be any fun to be around.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0605_Tip

8 years ago

Training Tip: Horses Teach People. Then People Teach Horses

I firmly believe that horses teach people, and then people teach horses – in that exact order – meaning that…

Read More
FILES2f20152f112f1117_Tip.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Training Tip: Nothing Beats Experience

The tricky part of knowing when a horse truly can’t get any better versus a horse that is lazy and…

Read More
011326_Tip

1 month ago

Training Tip: Horse Trailer Preferences

Question: What type of trailer do you prefer and why? Do you train horses to load on one type and…

Read More
0421_02

6 years ago

The Importance of the Verbal Whoa Cue

The verbal cue “whoa” should be used for one thing and one thing only – to tell a horse to…

Read More