The Secret to Getting Results With Your Horse

0412_02

One of the most frustrating things in the world is trying to accomplish a task but having no idea how to go about doing it. “As a kid, I read a lot of books and watched many videos of horse trainers doing amazing things with their horses. They could get their horses to back up by just pointing a finger at them or they could two-track their horses all over the arena with seemingly invisible cues. I wanted nothing more than to be able to control my horse’s feet just like them and to have that type of success in the saddle,” Clinton says.

“While I was extremely impressed with these trainers’ ability to work with horses, they really started to frustrate me. While the horses they worked with in the book or on the video performed each exercise like an old pro, my horse was the complete opposite. I’d go out to the pasture to back him up, and he’d bare his teeth at me and lunge forward. I’d flip through the book or review the video trying to find the answer to ‘What if my horse tries to kill me?’ but I was left empty-handed. The trainers in the books or on the videos had me believing that the horse should respond perfectly to the exercise the first time I attempted it. In reality, nothing could be further from the truth. The reason why they made it look so easy in the book or on the video is because they were always using trained horses that knew what to do and what was expected of them.”

It wasn’t until Clinton started attending clinics and apprenticing under the late Australian horseman Gordon McKinlay that he realized horses are just like humans – they don’t learn perfectly. “When you first introduce a new lesson to a horse, he’s going to get confused, frustrated and maybe even agitated or nervous. And you know what? That’s absolutely OK. Horses are allowed to express all of those emotions when you’re training them. It’s our job as a trainer to learn how to help the horse understand in the easiest way possible what we expect of him,” Clinton says.

After working with thousands of horses, Clinton realized that horses learn best using a step-by-step system. “They’re smart creatures, but they can’t process too many different things at the same time. I soon realized that if I took the time to break a lesson into steps and introduced each step to the horse separately, he caught on to the lesson a lot more quickly and progressed through his training at a faster rate,” Clinton says.

Learn more about how your horse thinks and perceives the world around him in Clinton’s Philosophy Series. It’s a free resource available to view on the Downunder Horsemanship app. To watch the series, go to the video category of the app and scroll down to the Philosophy section.

More News

Back to all news

See All
031726_03

2 months ago

Safely Tie Your Horse With Mecate Reins

We love mecate reins for their versatility – there are no better reins to trail with. The built-in lead rope…

Read More
FILES2f20152f062f0609_Tip.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Training Tip: Correcting a Horse That Bolts at Turnout

With a horse that likes to turn and bolt away from you as soon as you take the halter off,…

Read More

13 years ago

Training Tip: Teach your horse vertical flexion at the canter on a circle

  I’ve found that introducing vertical flexion at the canter to a horse on a circle makes it easier for…

Read More
1218_02

7 years ago

Success? Share It With Us!

Have you accomplished a milestone with your horse that you’re proud of? Experienced a lightbulb moment during a training session?…

Read More