Be Aware of Your Body Language

0530_03

Method Ambassador Aimee Rioux graduated the Clinician Academy in 2016 and counts learning to be more aware of her body language and what she’s communicating to her horses as one of the most valuable lessons she learned from Clinton. “You have to be aware of it and constantly adjust it for every situation you are in with your horse,” Aimee says. “Just because you have a sensitive horse doesn’t mean that your body language should always be laidback and passive, or if you’re working with a more cold-blooded horse, it doesn’t mean that your body language always needs to have more energy to it. You have to adjust your body language and cues to what your horse needs at the moment you’re working with him.”

Aimee is located in New Symrna Beach, Florida, where she trains horses for the public and teaches lessons and clinics. Learn more about Aimee on her website. Aimee can be contacted at [email protected] or 386-314-8148.

More News

Back to all news

See All
standlee_blog

7 years ago

Standlee Premium Western Forage Premium Performance coupon is back!

          May 1st to June 30th Buy 3, Get $5 OFF any bagged or compressed bale…

Read More
FILES2f20152f062f0616_03.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Halter Sizing Resources

A halter is an essential horse keeping and training tool, and the Downunder Horsemanship halter’s quality and effectiveness are unsurpassed….

Read More

14 years ago

Training Tip of the Week: Mouthy Horse Tip – Prevention is better than cure

The best way to handle a horse that gets mouthy is to never let the problem develop in the first…

Read More
1205_02

2 years ago

Clinton Learns How to Train Buffalo

The December No Worries Club download features Clinton working with Duncan Steele-Park and Glen Aspinall for a final time to…

Read More