Training Tip: What’s the Rush?

1227_tip

If you notice that your horse is in a hurry as you’re heading back home, do plenty of transitions with him to get his mind on you. When you do get back to the barn, put his feet to work. Spend ten minutes trotting and cantering him around the barn or in a nearby arena. Do lots of changes of direction to get him using the thinking side of his brain. Then unsaddle him and tie him up for a couple of hours to let him think about the lesson. The last thing you want to do when you get back to the barn, especially with a horse that’s already in a hurry to get back, is unsaddle him straightaway and put him back in his stall. Make him think that as soon as he gets back to the barn there’s just more work waiting for him. Horses never run fast to where they know they’re going to have to work.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0116_02

2 years ago

Train Your Horse to Move Forward Willingly

It’s impossible to train a horse without forward movement. “Having a horse that doesn’t move forward would be like if…

Read More
1015_03

6 years ago

No Worries Club Bonus Footage: Tyrion’s First Ride

In this week’s bonus footage upload to the Performance Horses: Reined Cow Horse series, Clinton shares raw footage of Tyrion’s…

Read More
ritchie_blog

6 years ago

Fresh Water Now Streaming

We Didn’t Invent Water. We Just Perfected It. Water should be fresh, clean and plentiful. Classic Equine By Ritchie waterers…

Read More

2 years ago

Training Tip: Rule #3 When Feeding Horses Treats

There are many myths in the horse world about feeding treats. Here are a few of the most common: “If…

Read More