Training Tip: The Importance of a Good Attitude

0425_Tip

Only stop working your horse when he has a good attitude and is respecting you as the leader, or at the very least, has a better attitude than when you started your training session. When horses first come to the ranch for training, especially if they’ve been disrespectful for a while, they get worked more than a horse that is respectful and has a good attitude. It really comes down to this – the worse the horse’s attitude, the more he’s worked. The better his attitude and the more he tries, the less he’s worked.

You’re telling the horse, “If you come out with a good attitude and try everything I ask of you, you won’t have to work as long. However, if you come out with a sorry attitude, you’ll work much harder.” If you’re consistent with that philosophy your horse will catch on quickly that if he has a good attitude and tries, he won’t have to work as long.

Don’t take what I just said out of context or to the extreme though. When you’re working your horse, you don’t want to run him out of air to the point of exhaustion, no matter how he’s behaving. If a horse runs out of air, he’ll only be concentrating on one thing – finding air, and he won’t be able to think about what you’re asking him to do. So it would be pointless to keep drilling on the exercise and making his feet move. You have to let him stop and give him a chance to get his air back. That doesn’t mean, however, that you can’t train on him at the same time. When you’re letting him air up, desensitize him. He already wants to stand still, so use it to your advantage.

The most important thing to remember is to not quit the horse before he’s using the thinking side of his brain and has a good attitude. If you quit him when he’s snarly or using the reactive side of his brain, you’ll only reinforce that behavior in him.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0405_01

4 years ago

How-to Articles and Inspiring Tales Featured in the Spring No Worries Journal

Get inspired to reach your horsemanship goals and receive in-depth training instruction in the spring issue of the No Worries…

Read More
0906_01a

10 years ago

Walkabout Tour in Montana This Weekend

Our last Walkabout Tour stop of the year presented by Ritchie Industries takes us close to the Canadian border and…

Read More
0806_02

7 years ago

Clinton Shares: Arena Maintenance and Pasture Care

When it comes to where you work your horse and the pastures you turn him out in, attention to detail…

Read More
1001_04

7 years ago

End Your Trailer-Loading Troubles

There’s nothing that unites equestrians across all disciplines as quickly as trailer-loading woes. At some point in your horsemanship journey,…

Read More