Training Tip: Trust vs Respect With Horses

0801_Tip

Question: My Thoroughbred mare had an abusive past and was quite fearful when I bought her. I followed your advice to treat her as any other horse and not worry about her past. I have done a lot of groundwork with her, and we’ve made a lot of progress. Several people in my riding group are commenting about how much my mare now trusts me and that’s why she’s behaving so well. My question to you is: What comes first—trust or respect? – beckisue

Clinton’s Answer: For a horse to trust you, he must respect you. A lot of people will come up to me at tours and ask: My horse doesn’t trust me. How do I get him to realize that I’m not going to hurt him? You can’t get trust until you have respect.

Think of it like this: If you don’t respect me as a horseman and my ability as a teacher, you won’t trust that what I suggest you do with your horse will work. If you respect me, you’re going to trust that what I’m telling you is the truth.

By teaching your horse the groundwork exercises and moving her feet forwards, backwards, left and right and always rewarding the slightest try, you’re earning her respect. When you get her feet moving and have her respect, you get her to use the thinking side of her brain.

That’s why the Method gets such great results—it’s step-by-step, it’s systematic. It’s not a hit-and-miss training approach; it’s not mystical and magical. If you follow the Method in the exact order that it’s laid out in—and I do mean the exact order—you will get results with your horse. If you change the order of the exercises, you’ll get some results but nowhere near the results you could get.

It’s no accident your horse is getting better. She’s making progress because you’re doing a great job of being a leader for her and teaching her. All of the responsibility comes back to us. Our horses are the result of the effort we put in to them.

Have a horsemanship question or looking for more training tips? Check out the No Worries Club.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1003_02a

2 years ago

Fall No Worries Journal Out Now

The fall issue of our quarterly No Worries Club magazine features our 2023 Method Ambassadors. You’ll get to learn all…

Read More
1003_01

2 years ago

Put Your Horse in the Arena at the Conroe Tour

Having trouble with your horse? Not sure what to try next? Or, just looking for a good start? If you’re…

Read More
0417_Tip

7 years ago

Training Tip: Ask Clinton: Sticky Feet on the Trail

Q: If I go out alone on the trail, my horse will just stop. If I press him forward, he…

Read More
0122_01

6 years ago

Clinician Academy Already 1/3 Full

The 2020 Clinician Academy slated to take place May 4th – June 19th at the Downunder Horsemanship Ranch is already…

Read More