Training Tip: Work on Individual Maneuvers to Avoid Anticipation

0418_Tip

If you show your horse in an event with patterns, like reining or dressage, don’t practice the pattern from start to finish during training sessions. Doing so is likely to cause your horse to anticipate the next maneuver and get ahead of you. Taking your horse through the same patterns over and over is not only boring, but teaches him that the same things happen at the same places in the arena, in the same sequence. Instead of waiting for your cues, your horse will be thinking, “I already know what comes next, we’ve done this a million times” and will take matters into his own hands.

When you’re schooling your horse, work on individual maneuvers within the pattern. I rarely take my horses through an entire reining pattern. Instead, I focus on individual maneuvers in each training session. In one session, my focus might be on improving my horse’s backup and in the next it may be on lead changes. I’m constantly evaluating each horse, figuring out what they need the most work on. The thing about horses is that they’re always fluctuating. One week I may need to focus on softening my horse and the next week the focus may be on speed control.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0731_06_1

7 years ago

Sharing Information and Squashing the Rumor Mill

Ever since we announced that Clinton would be focusing more on his performance horses and his personal goals as a…

Read More
0216_01

4 years ago

Earn Rewards When You Refer Your Friends to the Club

With our Refer a Friend program, whenever one of your friends signs up for the No Worries Club and names…

Read More
FILES2f20152f052f0526_Tip.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Training Tip: Be Effective With Pressure

Nagging a horse, constantly pecking at him without getting a result or failing to reward him for correct behavior, only…

Read More
standlee_duh_banner

6 months ago

Win a NWC Membership and Standlee Goodies

Win a year of No Worries Club membership plus goodies from Standlee Premium Western Forage in their 12 Days of…

Read More