Training Tip: Break Every Exercise Into Steps

FILES2f20142f062f0602_Tip.jpg.jpg

It wasn’t until I started attending clinics and apprenticing under Australian horseman, Gordon McKinlay, that I realized that horses are just like humans – they don’t learn perfectly. When you first introduce a new lesson to a horse, he’s going to get confused, frustrated and maybe even agitated or nervous. And you know what? That’s absolutely OK. Horses are allowed to express all of those emotions when you’re training them. It’s your job as a trainer to learn how to help the horse understand in the easiest way possible what you expect of him. After working with literally thousands of horses, I realized that they learn best using a step-by-step system. They’re smart creatures, but they can’t process everything at the same time. I soon realized that if I took the time to break a lesson into steps and introduced each step to the horse separately, he caught on to the lesson a lot quicker and progressed through his training at a faster rate.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0522_02

8 years ago

From Colt Starting to Well-Broke Horse

Clinton explains why a well-broke horse needs to receive equal doses of long rides, wet saddle pads and concentrated training:…

Read More
1225_05

7 years ago

Our Clinicians and Ambassadors Train Horses for the Public

You know that Clinton offered a beyond-compare training program for problem horses, colts that needed started under saddle and older…

Read More
030326_Tip

3 months ago

Training Tip: Avoid Overtraining Your Horse to Beat Burnout

Horses are individuals, and our job as trainers is to bring out the best in each horse. Every horse is…

Read More
FILES2f20152f112f1201_02.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Globe, Arizona Fundamentals Clinic

We’ve still got a few open participant spaces in our Globe, Arizona three-day Fundamentals Clinic. The event is being held…

Read More