Training Tip: Practice Transitions on the Trail

1008_Tip

When training horses on the trail, focus on transitions on the way home to keep your horse engaged with you. Our usual approach is after letting the horses spend three or so minutes walking on a big, loose rein to relax, we start giving them little puzzles to solve. We might trot forward and then come down to a walk and counterbend or two-track. Or walk the horse forward and then back up. Or you might practice Bending Transitions from the Fundamentals Series. The possibilities are endless.

We work on transitions for five to six minutes and then go back to letting the horse walk on a big, loose rein. We let him have his “friendly time” for two to three minutes and then get back to asking him to engage with us.

For the most part, during this portion of the ride, we stay away from the lope because we don’t want the horse to think that when we turn for home it means speed up and get there quickly. That’s a good way to teach a horse to be barn sour. Instead, we work on a lot of walk-to-trot and trot-to-walk transitions. That allows us to keep the horse engaged with us and to work on softening and suppling his body in a low-key, relaxed manner.

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
0604_Tip

7 years ago

Training Tip: Horse Acts Snarly Around Food

Q: I have a 4-year-old Quarter Horse filly. When I approach her with the grain bowl, her ears go flat…

Read More
FILES2f20162f072f0719_Tip.jpg.jpg

9 years ago

Training Tip: Turnout Makes for Healthier Horses

Horses are a herd animal and their bodies are designed to be on the move. I try to keep my…

Read More
1018_05

9 years ago

Meet Method Ambassador Brittney Watts

Method Ambassador Brittney Watts’ horsemanship journey started on the back of a mule named Daisy May when she was 5…

Read More
0227_02

2 years ago

Free Horsemanship Problem-Solving Help

If you’re around horses for any length of time, sooner or later, you’re bound to experience at least one of…

Read More