Training Tip: The Best Way to End a Training Session

1018_tip

If you finish when the horse is frustrated or misbehaving, that’s what he’s going to remember the next day, and then getting him over his problem will take twice as long. If you find that you’re in a time crunch and your horse isn’t performing well at a particular exercise, stop what you’re doing and practice an exercise you know the horse can do well. That way you’re finishing on a good note, doing something the horse knows how to do, and he is relaxed and is listening to you.

Sometimes of course, you’re going to have to quit your horse on a note you’re not pleased with. That will happen from time to time. To avoid that problem, before a training session ask yourself, “How much time do I have to train the horse today?” Then plan the session accordingly. If you have a limited amount of time, don’t pick a subject you know your horse struggles with and you can’t get accomplished in that timeframe. Always set yourself up for success, not failure.

More News

Back to all news

See All
NWCfind

8 years ago

Find it on the No Worries Club: The Importance of Putting Miles on Your Horse

“Leave on a young horse, come back on an old one,” is an important lesson Clinton’s late mentor Gordon McKinlay…

Read More
0105_02

5 years ago

Meet Method Ambassador Katie Votaw

Katie was in the saddle by the time she was 5 and began taking jumping lessons when she was 6….

Read More
1114_03

8 years ago

The Fundamentals Hits Hurricane Next Month

Our participants and their horses are ready to work with Clinton and his clinicians next month at the Hurricane, Utah…

Read More
FILES2f20162f012f0112_Tip.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Training Tip: A Blanketing Mistake to Avoid

The biggest mistake people make when blanketing their horses is sneaking the blanket up on the horse. If you reach…

Read More