Training Tip: Don’t Create a Cinchy Horse

FILES2f20152f102f1006_Tip.jpg.jpg

A mistake that tends to create a cinchy horse often happens the first time a colt is cinched up. If the girth is tightened too quickly, too soon, it frightens the horse and makes him feel really uncomfortable. Because he’s not used to having anything on his back, a tight cinch makes the new experience of being saddled even scarier for him, and often, this causes him to overreact and buck. Then the owner usually makes the second biggest mistake – they take the saddle off.

When I saddle a 2-year-old for the first time, I saddle him in the morning and keep him saddled all day. I turn him out in a safe area, where he can move his feet and won’t get the saddle hung up on anything. Letting the horse wear the saddle all day gives him a chance to get over being scared, and usually by the end of the day, he’s relaxed and has gotten past his initial reactiveness.

It’s very important to not take the saddle off until the horse has quit trying to get it off his back by bucking, rubbing it off on the fence, rolling with it, etc. For a horse to really accept a saddle, he has to think it’s part of his body, no different than his mane and tail.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0905_05

10 years ago

Is the Academy Horse Program Right for You?

You have a “problem” horse… All problems are caused by a lack of respect or fear, or in some cases,…

Read More
0507_02

2 years ago

Last Week of Study in the Clinician Academy

It’s crunch time for the horsemen enrolled in our 2024 Clinician Academy. This week marks the sixth week of the…

Read More

3 years ago

Training Tip: Horse Bites When Asked to Flex

Question: My horse either grabs the reins, bites the stirrup or tries to bite my boot when doing lateral bending….

Read More
0219_Tip

7 years ago

Training Tip: Don’t Bore Your Horse To Death

Once your horse understands an exercise, it’s important to move on. There’s nothing horses hate more than being forced to…

Read More