Training Tip: The Lightest Amount of Pressure Possible

0514_Tip

No matter what you’re asking a horse to do you must always ask with the lightest amount of pressure possible. Even if you know the horse isn’t going to respond correctly at first, you still need to give him the benefit of the doubt by asking lightly. If he ignores you, then you’ll gradually increase the amount of pressure until he responds correctly. You’ll ask him and then you’ll tell him, until one day when you ask him, there will be no need to tell him.

You may pick up on the rein 200 times with one ounce of pressure and the horse will resist it, and you’ll have to increase the pressure. But eventually, you’ll ask with one ounce of pressure, and he’ll respond immediately. However, if you always pick up with 10 ounces of pressure straightaway, you’ll always have to pick up with 10 ounces of pressure – the horse will never get any lighter.

Most people want to start with a low amount of pressure, which is great, but when their horse ignores them or doesn’t move his feet, they don’t increase the pressure. First you ask the horse to respond with the lightest amount of pressure possible. If he chooses not to respond, you’ll increase the pressure until you get what you’re looking for.

My mentor Ian Francis explained it to me like this: You ask, you suggest, you insist, you enforce. Regardless of how you phrase it, the real goal is to ask with the least amount of pressure and increase that pressure until you get the response you are looking for. If you start gently and finish gently, then eventually being gentle will be all that’s necessary to get the job done.

You’ll do what you have to do to get the job done. You’ll do it as easy as possible, but as firm as necessary. If you always ask gently, then increase the pressure as needed, over time all you’ll have to be is gentle.

More News

Back to all news

See All
NWCfind

6 years ago

Find It on the No Worries Club: Pretty is as Pretty Does

Many horse owners fall into the trap of buying a horse based on looks rather than on what sort of…

Read More
1120_Tip

7 years ago

Training Tip: Should You Let Your Horse Eat on the Trail

Invariably, whenever the subject of correcting a horse for snatching grass or eating on the trail is brought up, someone…

Read More
0624_01

10 months ago

Happening Now: Halter and Lead Rope Sale

We’ve marked down all of our Downunder Horsemanship halters and lead ropes by 25%! This special savings will be available…

Read More
0121_03

6 years ago

Contest: Walkabout Tour Excitement

We’re pumped up and ready for our first tour of the year this weekend in Conroe, Texas, so it’s no…

Read More