Training Tip: Horse Personalities: Cold-Blooded Horses

 

While the Method works on all types of horses, every horse will require you to vary your approach slightly. I break horses into two broad groups – hot-blooded horses and cold-blooded horses.

Cold-blooded horses are generally docile, laid back and relaxed. This category is made up of most draft breeds and some bloodlines of Quarter Horses and gaited horses. These horses like to do everything slow, and it usually takes them longer to catch on to a lesson or concept. However, once they understand a lesson, they never forget it.

Pros: Cold-blooded horses are generally easy to desensitize. Because of their laidback personalities, they’re often great confidence builders.

Cons: If you have a cold-blooded horse you’re going to spend a lot more time telling him to hurry up and move his feet. Unlike hot-blooded horses, cold-blooded horses say, “Life’s too short to be in a hurry. You look stressed. Do I look stressed?” They also have low ambition and don’t care to excel at anything except eating of course!

How They’ll Build Your Skills: Cold-blooded horses will teach you how to effectively increase pressure. When most of these horses are first asked to move their feet, they’ll develop a crabby attitude and be resistant. The “easy as possible, but firm as necessary” saying will definitely be put to good use.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1130_Tip

4 years ago

Training Tip: How to Stop a Horse From Putting His Tongue Over the Bit

Question: I have a 3-year-old Quarter Horse gelding that I bought just over six months ago. He was already “broke”…

Read More
0513_01

8 months ago

Brett Stone Featured on the Uncut & Real Raw Podcast

When Brett Stone rode Boomernic to the 1992 National Reining Horse Association Open Futurity championship, he brought with him a…

Read More

12 years ago

Members Only: An Introduction To Reining

In this month’s NWC DVD, Clinton invited National Reining Horse Association Futurity Champion Casey Deary to the ranch to help…

Read More

13 years ago

Training Tip of the Week: Hard-to-catch horse tip: Halter the easiest to catch horse first.

  If you keep your horse in a herd situation you’ve probably experienced the frustration of trying to halter a…

Read More