Horse Training Videos: 7 “Never Do’s” With Your Horse

 ”7 Never Do’s With Your Horse”

Have you ever wished you could have a fast-path to
success with something you love doing?

I do.

I think the fast food industry and
microwaves have ruined us.

They’ve taught us we can have stuff
quickly without waiting too long.

We want what we want and we want it
now…thank you very much.

When it comes to horses, you can’t
get instant results.

But you can learn things you should and
shouldn’t do very quickly without getting hurt.

That being so, I wanted to give a
quick list of “Never Do’s” with your horse.

I pulled these from JJ Rydberg’s
DVD which you can see at:

Horse Training Videos

Here they are:

Never Do #1:

Never constantly pull.
Take and give a loose rein.

Never Do #2:

Never teach anything past the trot that’s new,
he won’t learn it and it’ll frustrate you both.

Never Do #3:

Never keep working your horse without periodic
breaks during the session because he needs to
have control to feel good.

Never Do #4:

Never fight with the horse.  You won’t win. If
he gets mad, back WAAAAY off.

Never Do #5:

Never keep pushing your horse when you run into
problems. Go back to the basics and soften up on
the way you ride.

Never Do #6:

Never quit a horse when he’s mad.  You’ll pick
up right where you left off.  Better to leave
him feeling good so you pick up from there.

Never Do #7:

Never forget to spend lots of time teaching your
horse to give.

There you go.

7 valuable “Never Do’s”.

These are so important, I encourage you
to print them out, stick ‘em in your pocket, and
review them while working with your horse.

Again, these came from JJ Rydberg and you
can see more about him by clicking on the following:

Horse Training Videos

That’s it for today – Please stay safe out there!

Charlie

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Two Horse Training Principles

“What Are Your Top Two Training Principles?”

  I want to tell you about a visit I made to a ranch out near Maxwell, Nebraska
on my way to another stop out West.

This little ranch is 45,000 acres of rolling
hills that runs along and North of the
North Platte river in West-Central Nebraska.

Their little bit of heaven-on-earth is
a beautiful setting with lots of rich grasslands.

They run a cow/calf operation and have
over 30 brood mares.

I had a chance to visit with the ranch
manager, Steve Boeshart and his head
horse trainer Gary.  Both come from a long
line of ranching and horse-handling
and are masters of their trade.

You just might see more about their
horse training operation in the future.
I talked about going out and filming
Gary and his trainers as they work and
prepare their horses.

Gary has two full-time trainers working
with him and they take their colts from
groundwork all the way to confident,
working horses and then send them to
their 5 ranches and 3 other cattle
operations.

Wanna know something really interesting?

They don’t have a single four wheeler on
this 45,000 acre ranch.  Everything is
done on horseback.  Each cowboy has a
given area to ride and certain cattle
they are responsible for.

Needless to say, they know how to handle
their horses and turn out some excellent,
gentle, well-trained horses that respect
their riders.  And, just as important,
their riders respect their horses and
are confident in them.

They have to be – they rely on them day
in, day out.

I didn’t have much time to get into a lot
of details but I asked Gary what his top
2 or 3 training principles are.

Now, understand, he handles (rides/trains)
an average of 15 horses a day and has done
so for years.  He has taught dozens of
other trainer wanna-bees.  Gary knows his stuff.

What are his top 2 things a horse trainer needs
to know?

1. Understand the disposition of the horse
you are working with.  Each one is unique
and you have to be able to “read” the horse
before you can teach it anything.

2. Understand the mind of the horse and how
he learns.

That, my friends, is from the mouth of
an expert.  I believe with all my heart
that Gary is spot-on in his assessment.

It doesn’t matter whether you are training
a horse to drive and cut cattle, for trail
riding, endurance, dressage, or whatever.

The basics are still the same.  You have
to understand the horse and be able to
be work with him in confidence as you
communicate with him.  In turn, the horse
will build confidence in you.

All of these basics are handled in the
Jesse Beery course.  And lots of these
basics are handled in many of our DVDs
by trainers like Sam Burrell, Diana
Quintana, Sue Robertson, and more.

You can see all of at:

www.HorseTrainingResources.com

I’ll be back with more tips
tomorrow.

Work with your horses – but please do it safely.

Charlie

P.S. I’ve just enabled the coupon code
CHARLIEHORSE for everyone.  You’ll get
10% OFF any order you place by the end
of the week.

Simply enter the coupon code in the coupon box
on the checkout form and 10% will be taken off.

Thanks for your business.

****************************************************************

The most successful, proven horse training system in history.

300,000 horse owners think so.  Methods imitated and copied by
some of the most popular trainers today.

An investment you’ll use the rest of your life with all your
horses.  A well-trained horse under your control is the safest
way to go…and increases his value as well.

Start today:

“Prof. Jesse Beery’s Illustrated Course in Horse Training”

http://horsetrainingresources.com/beery.html

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Horse Training Tips: Vibrating The Bit To Get The Give

 “Vibrating The Bit To Get The Give”

Horse training, as you know, is not an event.

Horse training is a process.

It has fairly logical steps that go from one to another.

One of the big keys in horse training is getting a horse to “give”.

In other words, when you lift a rein and slightly pull, his head comes the direction
of the pull.

A good give is when you pull the rein,
his head follows and you almost can’t feel the
rein pulling.

In a sense, it’s almost like his head
follows your arm like your shadow follows your
body on a sunny day.

Now THAT’S a give!

In talking to Horse trainer Kenny Scott
during his filming Kenny said this:

“The horse has to
give his chin before
he gives anything else.”

Amen.

Kenny went on to say, “We work from the
chin, through the jaw, up the neck, to his withers.”

This gets the body to arc and gets the
horse broke at the withers.

If you want to know more of Kenny’s
techniques, you can read about them by clicking
the following:

http://horsetrainingresources.com/dvd-kennyscott.html

Eventually, Kenny uses that to get the
horse where he no longer uses his head for
balance – instead, his head becomes more like a
hood ornament…meaning he’s collected and balanced
and no longer needs his head for balance.

[Note that with the rider on, the horse’s normal
center of gravity has changed.  The head becomes
less of a force than normal.  However, if you’ve
ever watched cuttin’ horses you’d see where the
head a neck is still a major force.]

Anyway, since the chin is the place to
start, you may often have trouble getting that
chin.

If you do, here’s little secret.

Vibrate the bit.

Yep…vibrate it.

In other words, as you pull on the
rein a little and he’s not giving his chin,
vibrate the bit by shaking the rein.

You don’t shake it hard.

Just enough to make it uncomfortable.

As you do it, watch for the give.

Sometimes, the give may be so subtle
you’ll miss it.

Try not to miss it because the second
you get a try from your horse…quit.

Then let him think about it for a   moment.

As he gets it, you can ask for more.

One of the reasons the vibrating bit
works is because it’s uncomfortable. Horses
don’t like to be uncomfortable. (How human-like!)

They will seek comfort.  When they move
the direction you want and you cease vibrating
the bit, there’s the comfort.

Eventually they’ll understand, “Okay…when
I move my chin over here like he wants, then it’s
comfy.  That’s what I’ll do.”

The good thing is it’s not painful unless
his teeth are needing help or if the vibrating
bit is too intense.

http://horsetrainingresources.com/dvd-kennyscott.html

One thing to be aware of is you must have
patience with this.

DO NOT expect the horse to immediately
understand….

“Oh!…you want me to
move my chin over here?
Okay.  I get it.”

You see, just because “YOU” know what
you want doesn’t mean your horse does.

He has to guess.

Give him time.

With some horses, it will seem like it
takes forever.  You may think to yourself,
“Dumb horse.”

And sure as death and taxes, the second
you give up thinking it won’t work is the very
second the horse did what you asked…or was just
about to.

http://horsetrainingresources.com/dvd-kennyscott.html

OK…That’s it for today.  Stay safe out there!

Charlie

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