Mounting a Horse

   
       
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Sample Our Newsletter
"Teach a Horse to Sidepass Toward You on the Ground," from my FREE monthly newsletter

From the Training Horse in Hand Series:

"Stand not in front of your horse and not to his left, but in the space in between, that is, sort of facing his left shoulder. This area keeps you safer (notice the "er") from back leg kicks or tramplings. DO NOT GET IN FRONT OF YOUR HORSE where a sudden lurch can get you flattened. That would certainly take the fun out of this. Raise the lunge whip in your right hand, as if a conductor sans orchestra, up above your horse's left hip.

Now, listen and listen carefully: You must, must, must, develop a pattern and a rhythm to that pattern. It keeps you proactive and it breaks things down for your horse. If you want the horse to ever read your body language and begin sidepassing toward you, then you must be consistent with your teaching. That means that if you begin by raising your hand, pausing, clucking, and tapping, then ten minutes later you're still following that flow and pattern. As I've said many times, they've been everybody's dinner for eons and they're très fab at reading body language. But they suck at reading minds. Always holding your hand in such and such position and clucking is a clear signal to the trained horse. Thinking "x" but asking your horse to comply with inconsistent signals simply confuses and aggravates the both of you. Well-trained horses seemingly read their owner's minds, but they're either reacting to small clues given to them by their rider's body language, or they're trying things that have gotten them a release in the past, one after the other until successful."

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From John Lyons Trainer Keith Hosman

 
 

Stop Bucking Study Course
A Downloadable Book

A sample from Day 2:

"Yesterday’s installment suggested that you read a short article “An Easy Way To Look At Training: Redirecting Pressure.” The point it makes is that the energy in your high horse has to go somewhere. Ask Einstein - it doesn’t just disappear. Like a tea kettle, pressure builds up and causes bucks, rears, broken shoulders and cracked heads. To get control, we rechannel this energy, diverting it to power our training. Rather than pulling back on the reins, trying to cap the pressure, we’ll let steam out through movement. The horse won’t forget to buck; he decides it “ain’t worth it."

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

Just $4.99

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 Mount & Dismount a Horse (series)

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