Training Tip: Back Circles to Improve Your Horse’s Overall Performance

0611_Tip

A large part of training performance horses focuses on ensuring your horse’s entire body, from his nose to his tail, is soft and supple. You should be able to move any part of his body off a feather-light touch. If you can’t shape your horse for a maneuver, there’s no hope that he’ll be able to perform it well.

An exercise I use frequently to get my horses soft is Backing Circles. While the concept is simple, it’s a fairly difficult exercise for a horse to master. For that reason, I break the exercise up into two separate parts. Initially, I teach the horse to back up in a circle with his head tipped in the opposite of the direction he’s backing in because it makes it easier for him. A horse’s hindquarters naturally go in the opposite of the direction his head is tipped. So if his head is tipped to the right, it’s much easier for him to back in a circle to the left.

Once a horse is backing in a circle well, with his head tipped in the opposite direction from the one his hindquarters are moving in, then I ask him to back the circle with his head tipped in the same direction that his hindquarters are traveling in. It’s very important not to move on to this stage until the horse is easily doing the first stage well.

Not only is backing circles a great softening and suppling exercise, but it also helps set a horse up for executing spins and rollbacks better. When a lot of horses do a spin or rollback, they put their inside front foot too far forward and then have a hard time crossing over correctly. Backing circles gets the horse’s inside front foot to step back and over so that when he goes into a spin or rollback, his inside front foot is always stepping in the correct position.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1205_01

3 years ago

What It Takes: Getting Into the Clinician Academy

While there are plenty of people who dream of attending the Academy in hopes of becoming Method Ambassadors, only a…

Read More
0206_02

2 years ago

Training Guide to Safely Ride Your Horse in a Group

While you are initially training your trail horse, Clinton recommends riding the horse outside the arena by yourself. That way…

Read More
0623_03

6 years ago

Five Common Horse Feeding Mistakes

By Dr. Tania Cubitt, Performance Horse Nutrition and Standlee Premium Western Forage® Feeding horses should be easy, but unfortunately, it…

Read More
0117_01

3 years ago

Uncut and Real Raw With Clinton Anderson Podcast off to a Blazing Start

Clinton’s foray into podcasting is off to a great start thanks to all of you! He released his Uncut and…

Read More