Training Tip: A Great Partnership Requires Daily Maintenance

0822_Tip

Unfortunately, respect is non-transferable. Just because I have earned a horse’s respect does not mean I can hand him over to you and he will respect you the same way. Each person is responsible for gaining each horse’s respect. That frustrates many people because they spend a lot of money on a well-trained horse and within six months, the horse acts like he doesn’t know a thing. Horses don’t care how much money they cost, how much money you make or what part of town you live in. Their only concern is that you know the rules to horsemanship. And the number one rule is: Whoever moves first, loses. If you don’t make your horse move his feet forwards, backwards, left and right and you don’t maintain that respect between the two of you, his behavior will get worse. However, if you maintain that respect and improve upon it, your horse’s behavior will get better. Horses don’t ever stay the same. Every day they either get a little bit better or a little bit worse.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1207_Tip

4 years ago

Training Tip: An Invisible Protective Bubble

There are two categories of respect: a safety category and a learning category. The safety category teaches you how to…

Read More
0129_04

7 years ago

HandsOn Gloves: Must-Have Grooming Essential

When Clinton and the team at the ranch gave HandsOn Gloves a trial run, the grooming tool was an overwhelming…

Read More
classic-equine_blog

6 years ago

Classic Equine Providing for the Community

Last week, our longtime sponsor, Classic Equine, announced that they switched their machines from stitching felt, wool and leather to…

Read More
FILES2f20142f122f1216_Tip.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Training Tip: Get Your Horse Backing Well

I back my horses up every chance I get. In fact, I very rarely just lead my horse somewhere. Like…

Read More