At some
point in its training, something will startle or
frighten an energetic, red blooded baby horse
and he will rear or pull back or run sideways
while the trainer is leading him. Or he may jump
around just because he's young and he's feeling
good. Or maybe he's challenging his trainer like
he would another horse in the herd just to see
who's who in the pecking order.
These things are actually the trainer's fault
because they allowed the animal's attention to
wander. Then an awful lot of trainers make a
second mistake. To get the horse's attention
back, they jerk the shank or yank the horse
sideways or pop him with the end of the lead
rope or they yell at him.
This is the "biggest, baddest wins" school of
horse training. This method sometimes looks like
it works. If the trainer really is the biggest,
baddest one, they may get the horse to freeze
and hesitate before they startle or rear or pull
back the next time. But the horse hasn't really
learned anything except that when they're
frightened or startled, they're going to get
attacked so they better watch out. That's not a
lesson you can build on to teach the horse
anything else.
The trainer intends these jerking or pulling
or popping pressures as punishment for the
horse's "disobedience." They think if the
consequences of a particular behavior are bad
enough, the horse will avoid that behavior. But
it doesn't work that way. The horse feels
shanking, jerking, yelling, or popping as an
attack. So instead of shaping the behavior the
trainer really wants, these things just
accelerate the behavior they were trying to
correct.
Most people are scared when a horse rears up.
Their first reaction is to jerk on the lead rope
or get out in front of the horse and pull on it.
Pulling down on a horse's head gives the horse
the feeling of being trapped. The fastest way to
put a rearing horse over backwards is to keep
pulling on his head because his natural tendency
is to fight back against the pressure. Just the
same, if you get out in front of a horse that's
running back and start pulling on his head, the
horse will just go backwards faster. You'll see
horses running backwards with someone running
right in front of them holding on to the rope
and jerking. To the horse, this is a head on
attack that just drives him back more. If it's a
horse that's challenging you or unhappy for some
reason and you get in front of him, he can get
you with his left or right front foot or with
his teeth.
The only really safe place to be around a
horse is close enough to it so that it can't get
any swing going with anything. That means at and
right against the shoulder. When you work with a
horse, you always work from the shoulder back
and from the shoulder forward as you get to know
the horse. When a horse rears as you are walking
beside it, you want to stay as close to the
shoulder as possible. The front feet are what
will hurt you and if you can stay against the
shoulder, there is no way the front feet, back
feet, or teeth can get you. If you need to, grab
a chunk of mane and pull yourself against the
shoulder. You give the horse all the lead line
it needs to go up.
The best way to deal with rearing or pulling
is not to let them get started in the first
place. You do that by keeping your attention on
the horse and the horse's attention on you at
all times. Every stride. Nobody's perfect,
however. So if the horse does startle or pull
back or rear, you just go about your business
and put him right back to work. Don't attack or
punish the horse for "being disobedient."
Remember, there is no such thing as a
disobedience if you're not directing the horse.
That means you have to be telling the horse what
TO DO and what NOT TO DO. Pulling or rearing or
jumping sideways may be a lapse of obedience but
when they happen, you simply interrupt them with
instructions of what to BE doing. No punishment.
No fight. No fuss.
Your primary objective in any training
session whether you're working on the ground or
from the saddle is rhythm and relaxation. What
the horse needs is steady, physical work at a
mental level that you have created which is
alert enough and excited enough to pay attention
to you but not frightened and not tense. He's
just looking to have a good time, and that's
what we're trying to teach him to do--how to
have a good time playing our game. If he gets
startled or frightened, you want him to come to
you as the safe place to be. You want to be a
person he can trust for some direction to get
him past whatever is frightening or startling.
When you're working with a horse, pay
attention to his ears because they'll tell you
where his attention is and whether he's relaxed.
Whether you're walking alongside him or up on
his back, you want one or both of those ears
swiveled in your direction to let you know you
have his attention. If you don't, put him to
work with some heeding or change what you're
asking for under saddle just a little until he
gives his attention back to you.