Training Tip: Correcting a Horse That Bolts at Turnout

FILES2f20152f062f0609_Tip.jpg.jpg

With a horse that likes to turn and bolt away from you as soon as you take the halter off, one of the best things you can do with him in the pasture is practice Yield the Hindquarters Stage Two to get him hooked on giving you two eyes. Anytime you’re around your horse, two eyes are always better than two heels. As long as the horse is looking at you with two eyes, he can’t bolt or kick out at you. Remember, with horses, it’s two eyes for attention and respect and two heels for disrespect. Practice the exercise until as soon as you even lean forward and look at the horse’s hindquarters with active body language, he immediately yields his hindquarters and looks at you with two eyes.

More News

Back to all news

See All
FILES2f20152f092f0929_02.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Consistency is a Must

A truly broke horse needs equal doses of long rides, wet saddle pads and concentrated training. Clinton realizes that commitments,…

Read More
1031_01

8 years ago

86 Hours of Free Content

The Downunder Horsemanship app is your on-the-go resource to connect with Clinton and the Method. The app is a free…

Read More
0530_Tip

3 years ago

Training Tip: Training and Handling Deaf Horses

It always surprises me how many people think deaf horses are useless and untrainable to the point of thinking a…

Read More
0604_03

7 years ago

Got a Horse That Paws? Clinton’s Got the Fix!

You’ve probably seen the horse that digs himself into a hole when left tied up or bangs a front hoof…

Read More