Training Tip: Always Bring Your Horse Back to the Barn Relaxed

0207_Tip

Let the horse walk the last hundred feet or so of the ride so that he returns to the barn relaxed. You don’t want him running back to the barn thinking that the faster he gets there the sooner you’ll get off his back. The best saying when working with a horse is, “A tired horse is a good horse.” I’ve never seen a tired horse give anyone any trouble, but I’ve seen plenty of fresh, reactive horses give people lots of trouble. You’ll be surprised at how you might leave on a horse that’s spooky and jumpy, and come back on one that’s calm and relaxed. Remember, the secret to getting a broke horse is long rides, wet saddle pads and concentrated training. You need equal doses of all three.

More News

Back to all news

See All
FILES2f20142f122f1202_Tip.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Training Tip: Understand Trailering From Your Horse’s Perspective

To help your horse overcome his trailering fears, you have to look at trailering from his perspective. As prey animals,…

Read More
FILES2f20152f042f0407_Tip.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Training Tip: The Five Body Parts

It doesn’t matter what sport you do with your horse – western pleasure, dressage, trail, jumping, cutting, reining, etc., every…

Read More
0414_03

6 years ago

Handling Barn-Sour Horses on the Trail

Does your horse throw “I don’t wanna go tantrums” every time you try to ride him away from the barn?…

Read More
1209_02a

4 months ago

Winter Training Made Easier: Hydration, Energy and Focus Through Better Forage

By Standlee Premium Western Forage Winter can make training more challenging: shorter days, frozen water bucket, less turnout, and unpredictable…

Read More