Training Tip: Buddy-Sour Horses

FILES2f20162f072f0705_Tip.jpg.jpg

Whether your horse doesn’t want to leave his buddies on the trail or overreacts when you take him away from his buddies at shows, use these tips to regain control and focus his attention on you.

  1. When you’re dealing with a buddy-sour horse, you have to use a little reverse psychology on him. Instead of the horse thinking that being with his buddy is the best place in the world, you have to make the horse believe that his buddy is the worst thing in the world.

  2. Trot the horse in circles, canter serpentines, practice rollbacks — anything to hustle the horse’s feet. The more changes of direction you do, the more the horse has to pay attention to you and focus on what you’re asking him to do. After working the horse next to his buddies for several minutes, rest him 50-100 feet away from the other horses. While he’s resting, rub him and give him a chance to catch his breath. Prove to him that being away from his buddies is a good thing.

  3. Establish a starting point. In the beginning, you might only be able to take your horse 20 feet away from the other horses. That’s OK; you’ll gradually build your horse’s confidence little by little.

  4. Repeat the process until the horse couldn’t care less about getting back to his buddies. Consistency is your greatest ally. In order for your horse to not panic and use the reactive side of his brain every time he is separated from his buddy, you’ll have to practice taking him away from the other horse.

More News

Back to all news

See All
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
0330_02

5 years ago

Free Horse-Trailering Resource

Trailer-loading troubles are some of the most common issues all equestrians experience at one point or another with their horses….

Read More
NWCfind

9 years ago

Find it on the No Worries Club Website: Chilling Out a Busy-Minded Horse on the Trail

In the summer 2015 issue of the No Worries Journal, Clinton provides a step-by-step plan for helping a horse that’s…

Read More
FILES2f20162f022f0301_Tip.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Training Tip: Stand Still for Mounting

A horse that constantly moves around when you try to slip your foot in the stirrup is not only frustrating,…

Read More