Training Tip: Forget an Abused Horse’s History

0225_Tip

The biggest pitfall people run into when working with rescued horses and horses that have been abused or mistreated is dwelling on the horse’s past. The very first thing I do when I get a horse in for training is to forget about his past and focus on his future. Regardless of a horse’s history, every horse’s training starts at the very beginning of the Method.

Now, of course, if the horse has been badly abused, it might take a little bit longer to do some of the exercises. For example, let’s say you’re working with a horse that was beaten with a whip. When you go to desensitize him to the stick and string, he’s probably going to be frightened of it. It’ll likely take longer to build his confidence, but ultimately, the Method doesn’t get changed.

After two to three months of consistent training, every horse ends up in the same place. When I trained horses for a living in Australia, I’d have horses come to me that had severe problems—from bucking and rearing to being hard to catch and aggressively going after their owners. When the owners would drop their horses off, I’d always ask them about their horse’s history. To be perfectly honest, I was mostly just being polite. I say that because if you spend any time at all training horses for the public you quickly figure out that when people drop a horse off for training, they underestimate all of the bad stuff the horse does and over exaggerate all of the good stuff he does. Ultimately, it didn’t matter what they told me, I was going to do my own safety check with the horse anyway.

My safety check of course was starting the Fundamentals groundwork exercises, beginning with roundpenning. I did nothing but groundwork with all of the horses for at least the first seven days I had them in training. By the time I started riding them, all of the bad behavior had disappeared because I’d gotten all of the fear out of the horses and had earned their respect and trust on the ground.

Looking for more training tips? Check out the No Worries Club. Have a training question? Send it to us at [email protected].

More News

Back to all news

See All
1026_01

5 years ago

You Want a Safe, Dependable Horse, We can Help!

Our Professional Clinicians and Method Ambassadors train horses for the public, following our six-week Academy Horse Program. The training program…

Read More
0204_03

6 years ago

Second Training Sessions in Cow Horse Series Going Live

The videos in the second training session in the Cow Horse Series have started to be released on the No…

Read More
0814_02

8 years ago

Thank You, Canada!

This past weekend, Clinton taught his final three-day Fundamentals Clinic on road, and he had a phenomenal group of horsemen…

Read More
0516_Tip

9 years ago

Training Tip: An Exercise to Slow Down a Speedy Trail Horse

If your horse has a tendency to race ahead when you’re riding in a group, here’s a way to teach…

Read More