The Daily Training
Routine
by Ron Meredith
It takes a long time to develop a
full communication system with a horse.
When you first begin the training
process, the horse's vocabulary of
understanding is pretty limited and that
limits what you can expect of him. As he
learns more, you can expect more.
Eventually there will come a time
when you have developed full
communication with the horse and you
know he understands what you are asking.
You support every request with a
corridor of pressures applied
consistently at every stride. Once you
and the horse have reached this advanced
level, you should expect compliance with
every request. You do your part, and you
expect the horse to do his.
But with a baby green horse at the
beginning of training, we don't expect
the horse to understand all of the
shapes we want him to take when we apply
given pressures. He doesn't understand
which physical or psychological
pressures we want him to ignore like the
girth or something flapping above eye
level. He doesn't understand which
pressures are methodically applied
directional pressures such as leg
pressure on one side asking him to move
his hindquarters in the opposite
direction when we're riding or our
primary line opening up for a turn when
we're leading him that he can remove by
taking the shape we want. We don't
expect full compliance in the beginning
because the baby horse's vocabulary
needs to grow.
So the baby horse has to add these
pressures one by one to his vocabulary.
You have to break everything you want to
teach him down into the smallest number
of little tiny pieces that you can. Then
teach each of those things one at a
time.
There isn't any hard and fast rule
about how long an individual training
session should last when you are working
the horse. I like to think of each
lesson in thirds. There's a warmup
third, a training third and a cooling
down third.
You spend the first third of the time
in a warm up arrangement that mentally
and physically gets the horse in rhythm
with relaxation. If he's a beginning
horse, he may just run around and play
with you following him around. If he's a
little more educated you might longe him
or do some gymnastic exercises under
saddle. This is the time when you allow
him to work slow to be pumping the
fluids in his legs from his frog and to
get his joints working free and muscles
warmed up.
The middle third of the training
session is where you practice things the
horse already knows and it is the only
time when you introduce anything new,
anything beyond what the horse already
understands. You never introduce
something new out of the clear blue sky.
Anything new should be only a tiny baby
step away from what the horse already
knows and has practiced. You go along
really slowly and introduce things in
very small increments so the horse stays
interested and the rhythm and relaxation
keep going. And don't hesitate to just
stop in the middle if everything turns
into a can of worms because it's always
better to stop and reboot.
It's important to recognize the
difference between teaching the horse
something and him just accepting it. For
example, a laid back horse might stand
there and accept the saddle pad and the
saddle and the girth and so on. Because
the horse is accepting each new thing as
one of those things people just do and
staying relaxed about it, it looks like
he's trained. If you don't realize you
haven't really taught the horse anything
yet, there's going to be a wreck when
you come to a place where the horse's
acceptance and his understanding are in
conflict. When you try to tell him to
move and do something with all that
stuff on him, that's when he's suddenly
going to find that he's being attacked
from all directions by something that
has him restrained and constrained and
his excitement level is going to go
right through the roof. It's a very
tricky thing because a lot of people
think that a horse that you've never had
to develop any control over is a perfect
horse but actually they just don't have
any control over him.
In order for the horse to add a
pressure to his vocabulary, at some
point he has to resist things a little
bit and you have to calm him a little
bit and show him that you're a friend he
can trust not to hurt him. That doesn't
mean you go around picking fights with
him. If you add something new and
everything's fantastic then take it all
off today. Do it again the next day and
the next day. After three or four days
you can start heeding him with all this
gear on. When he's heeding really well
with all the gear on, then you longe him
with it on. Then someone just sits on
him. Then you heed him with someone on
his back. Then you longe him with
someone one his back. And gradually you
add the bridle and bit pressures and you
just go along baby step by horse-logical
baby step.
The last third of the training
session is the cool down period. This is
the horse's time to physically and
mentally unwind before you put him away.
If everything's gone along great, you've
practiced the things the horse already
knows or added another little thing to
his vocabulary while keeping him
rhythmic and relaxed. The time to start
cooling him down is while everything is
going well, before he gets tired or his
attention starts to wander.
Any time you're having a good time
and it starts to change, that's the time
to cool him down and put him away. Any
time that the relationship between you
and the horse seems to be going the
wrong way--he's not interested in you
today or whatever--you let him play a
while and then put him away. Any time
you're not sure what to do next, that's
the time to put him away. Any time you
feel you were lucky and got away with
something, that's the time to put him
away.
The horse's daily training routine
should not be based on a set of
particular actions you've decided to
take to teach him according to any
particular schedule. A training routine
should be based on the horse's reactions
to your actions. A good routine
maintains both the horse's comfort level
and the horse's attention level.
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