Q&A: Horse Slowly Straightens His Head When Flexing

060226_01

Question: When I practice flexing my horse, as soon as I touch the rein and begin to slide my hand down it, he’s already halfway bent around. He gives to the pressure nicely, but when I drop the rein to reward him, he slowly stretches his head and neck out straight. It’s like he doesn’t understand that I released the pressure. What do I do?

Clinton’s Answer:

Congratulate yourself on doing a great job with your horse! This is what I call a nice problem to have.

When I release the rein, I don’t like it when a horse snatches his head back. It’s what I call a false give. When a horse snaps his head away like a coiled spring, he’s not really soft—he’s just making you think he is. He’s got an attitude about it. “OK, I’ll flex but only because you’re making me!” You want the horse to slowly take his head back straight when you release the rein. That means he’s waiting for you.

And when he’s already halfway bent around by the time you get your hand halfway down the rein, that’s great. That means he’s anticipating and trying to help you. The opposite is you sliding your hand down the rein, pulling his head around and him putting in zero effort. Your horse is obviously putting in a lot of effort and really trying to help you out.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0423_Tip

2 years ago

Training Tip: Is It Safe to Cross-Tie Your Horse?

Cross-ties are different from other ways to tie a horse up because instead of there being one pressure point on…

Read More
DUHapp_QA

7 years ago

Digital Content Q and A

Q: I do not have a way to connect to the internet while at the barn. How will I be…

Read More

14 years ago

Colt Starting Series – Now Available!

Our first shipment of the much-anticipated Colt Starting Series came earlier than expected and the kits are now available. The…

Read More

14 years ago

Our Biggest Sale of the Year

The days are getting shorter which means fewer daylight hours for riding, but it also means our biggest sale of…

Read More