Training Tip: Help With a Mare Tossing Her Head and Pigrooting

1230_Tip

Question: We have a 4-year-old mare that likes to put her head down a lot in a trot and throw it about and she throws in a pigroot at times. How do we stop her doing that without pulling on her mouth all the time?

Answer: Assuming there’s no medical issue, your horse lowering her head and shaking it about and kicking out (or pigrooting as we Australians like to call it) is just her copping an attitude and throwing a fit. You’re right to not want to get into a pulling match with her. Instead, focus on earning her respect and teaching her to be soft and responsive to your cues.

If you haven’t, take your mare through the Fundamentals Series, starting with the groundwork and working your way through the riding exercises. If you follow the exercises in order and complete each one, you’ll find that this problem will disappear.

Riding exercises that will be especially beneficial to your horse will be One Rein Stops and the Cruising Lesson. Those two lessons will teach your mare to move forward at the gait you set her at and maintain that gait on a loose rein until you tell her otherwise.

Looking for more training tips? Check out the No Worries Club. Have a training question? Submit it on our website.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1128_Tip

2 years ago

Training Tip: What to do When Your Horse Kicks Out at Other Horses

Question: My mare kicks out at other horses when I walk her in hand around the stables. Do you have…

Read More
0913_Tip

3 years ago

Training Tip: Overcoming a Horse’s Ingrained Bucking Habit

Question: I bought my horse Hank, a 4-year-old Quarter Horse, last fall, and he had a good start. I was…

Read More
0917_Tip

1 year ago

Training Tip: Horse Won’t Walk on the Trail

Question: I have a Paso Fino that won’t stop running. I’ve tried running him until he is sweaty, but he…

Read More
0503_Tip

4 years ago

Training Tip: Horse Pins His Ears When You Walk Past His Stall

A horse pins his ears and acts defensive when you walk past his stall because he is protective of his…

Read More