Training Tip of the Week: Mouthy horse tip: Make the horse correct himself.

 

A great way to get a mouthy horse to stop his unwanted behavior is to make him think he’s punishing himself. For example, a lot of young horses like weanlings or yearlings get mouthy. They’ll come up to you and start nibbling on the sleeve of your shirt or your jeans. If your horse walks up to you and starts playing with your sleeve, without even looking at him, flap your elbow out to the side so that he runs into it with his nose and feels uncomfortable. You have to time it just right so that at the same time he leans forward to play with your shirt, he runs into your elbow. The secret is not to look at him or act like you’re moving your arm on purpose. It’s like your elbow just developed a nervous twitch. If you look at the horse, it’s like you’re acknowledging that you’re the one making him feel uncomfortable. You want the horse to think that he’s doing it to himself. Every time he leans in to nibble on you, he runs into your elbow. Horses always learn faster when they teach themselves the lesson. It won’t be long before your horse is like “Man, I really need to keep my lips to myself because I seem to be running into his elbow.”

More News

Back to all news

See All
Phoenix_header_heart-attacks

6 years ago

Fundamentals With Phoenix: How to Train Your Human

Lesson 3: Heart Attacks Are Free, So Give Your Human One This week’s lesson builds off last week’s spooking tutorial,…

Read More
standlee_blog

8 years ago

How to Adjust Feeding Your Horse in the Winter

In the next couple of months, understanding “Lower Critical Temperature (LCT)” will be important for caring and feeding your horse(s)…

Read More

14 years ago

Leaving for Lufkin

Besides providing a great learning opportunity, the tour will also help the local nonprofit organization, Safe Haven Rescue, raise money…

Read More
FILES2f20162f072f0705_Tip.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Training Tip: Buddy-Sour Horses

Whether your horse doesn’t want to leave his buddies on the trail or overreacts when you take him away from…

Read More