Training Tip: Beating The Spook On The Trail – Warm Up With Groundwork

 

Before hitting the trail, be sure your horse is in the right frame of mind, meaning he’s calm, using the thinking side of his brain and focused on you. Most of the time, horses spook because they’re fresh and using the reactive side of their brain. Don’t just pull your horse out of the pasture, throw the saddle on him and head out on the trail. Set yourself up for success by practicing groundwork and reminding your horse that you are the leader and he needs to respect you and let you call the shots.

If you’re at home, practice groundwork exercises like Lunging for Respect Stage Two, the C-Pattern, Sidepassing, etc. in the arena. If you’ve trailered your horse somewhere for a ride, find an open area where you can get his feet moving and changing directions. Remember, in order to get a horse to respect you and use the thinking side of his brain, you have to move his feet forwards, backwards, left and right. The more you ask the horse to change directions, the quicker you’ll get his attention. The entire time that you’re working with the horse on the ground, he should be hustling his feet. Don’t just let him lazily jig-jog around. You want to get rid of any freshness he might have before taking him out on the trail.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1008_02

2 years ago

Fall Journal Out for No Worries Club Members

The fall issue of our quarterly No Worries Club magazine features our 2024 Method Ambassadors. You’ll get to learn all…

Read More
0206_01

2 years ago

Colt Starting Clinic Diary: First Ride Outside

In this month’s No Worries Club exclusive, members are taken back to the Colt Starting Clinic with Professional Clinician Jeff…

Read More
0405_04

4 years ago

Make Sure Your Horse Drinks “Clean”

By Ritchie Industries Most of us are familiar with the “eating clean” nutritional trend that has influenced the proliferation of…

Read More
FILES2f20152f062f0616_03.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Halter Sizing Resources

A halter is an essential horse keeping and training tool, and the Downunder Horsemanship halter’s quality and effectiveness are unsurpassed….

Read More