Training Guide: How to Stop Your Horse From Biting You

0928_04

Horses need both mental and physical stimulation to be happy and content. If you don’t give your horse a job and keep his mind busy, he’ll find an outlet for his pent-up energy and a way to keep his mind busy. In a lot of cases, that results in the horse developing some sort of vice (weaving, cribbing, etc.) including being mouthy—constantly playing with your shirt sleeve or nibbling on the lead rope, for example. Very athletic horses and young horses tend to develop this habit.

The bad news is that mouthy behavior often turns into biting—a very dangerous vice. The good news is if you give your horse a job, as simple as making him move his feet forwards, backwards, left and right, his mouthiness will disappear.

In the training guide, “A Case of the Nibbles,” Clinton explains how to address your horse’s mouthiness and deter him from biting you.

Read the training article now on the Downunder Horsemanship website.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1205_01

8 years ago

Don’t Miss Clinton and the Method in Queensland

This weekend, Clinton will be in Queensland to put on a two-day training event with his mentor and standout horseman…

Read More
1220_04

9 years ago

Two Spots Available in 2017 Clinician Academy

The 2017 Clinician Academy is nearly full with 15 horsemen signed up to participate in the seven-week program that begins…

Read More
0326_02

2 years ago

Hello Spring Sale

Starting tomorrow, March 27th, we’re running a sale to help you say goodbye to winter and hello to spring! Save…

Read More

13 years ago

Training Tip of the Week: Mouthy horse tip: Make the horse correct himself.

  A great way to get a mouthy horse to stop his unwanted behavior is to make him think he’s…

Read More