Find it on the No Worries Club Website: Learn how to Counterbend Your Horse

NWCfind

A step-by-step approach to training that focuses on suppleness as well as impulsion, addresses your horse’s fitness from head to tail. Whether you cut cows or trail ride, a well-balanced training program can improve your horse’s athleticism, achieve a deeper level of communication and responsiveness and enhance his overall well-being – a fit, flexible horse has greater endurance and resistance to injury.

“Exercises that ask your horse to bend and move sideways, such as two-tracking, shoulder in/shoulder out and counterbending, improve your horse’s balance by increasing his ability to use his hind end. These lateral exercises, which include any of a series of exercises that move either your entire horse and/or an isolated section of his body to the left or the right of a path on which he’s traveling, are excellent for developing the muscles of the topline and hindquarters, which your horse needs for slow, collected gaits,” Clinton says. “When it comes to preparing your horse for collected canter transitions, spins and lead changes, these exercises are indispensable.”

In the fall 2014 edition of the No Worries Journal, Clinton explains step-by-step how to teach your horse to counterbend. Log in to the No Worries Club website to read the article “Counterbend for a Softer, Suppler Horse” now.

More News

Back to all news

See All
FILES2f20162f022f0223_02.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Part 2 of “Titan: A Legend in the Making” Series Released

If you’re following the training journey of Clinton’s standout performance horse, Titan, you’ll be excited to know that part two…

Read More
0508_02

8 years ago

First Week of the 2018 Clinician Academy in the Books

Last Monday, the 2018 Clinician Academy officially got underway at the Downunder Horsemanship Ranch. This year’s class is full of…

Read More
1121_Tip

13 years ago

Training Tip: Help your horse stay stumble-free

  If your horse is stumbling during your rides, keep these points in mind to make sure you’re not accidentally…

Read More
0612_Tip

8 years ago

Training Tip: Ask Clinton: Reacting to Other Horses

Q: I consider my 10-year-old Quarter Horse to be bombproof, but she starts acting up when we trail ride and…

Read More