Training Tip: Horse Bites When Being Saddled

FILES2f20152f122f1229_Tip.jpg.jpg

If your horse tries to bite you when you saddle him, first make sure your tack is clean and it fits your horse properly and your horse has no health problems. More than likely, though, your horse is nipping at you because of a lack of respect. How do you earn a horse’s respect? By moving his feet forwards, backwards, left and right and always rewarding the slightest try. So when your horse goes to bite you, immediately make him hustle his feet. If you’re in the barn, back him down the alleyway.

If you know he’s going to try to bite you, it’d be smart to saddle him up in the arena or in a roundpen where you’ll have more room to move his feet. As soon as he reaches back to bite you, immediately put his to work. Back him up with a lot of energy or do Lunging for Respect Stage Two. What you do doesn’t really matter, but what is important is that you hustle his feet.

If the saddle is already on the horse’s back but not cinched up, hold the saddle with one hand so that it doesn’t fall as you hustle the horse backwards.

After five minutes of moving his feet, stop and go back to saddling him again. If he goes to bite, repeat the same process. It won’t take many repetitions of you making him hustle his feet for him to realize that standing still and keeping his teeth to himself is far easier than having to work hard.

A lot of people in this situation are tempted to smack the horse when he bites. That rarely works, though. What ends up happening is the horse turns it into a game. He’ll see how fast he can try to bite you before you can whack him away.

If you teach your horse all of the Fundamentals groundwork exercises, and are thorough with each one, this biting habit will disappear. It’ll just fix itself because most horse problems are nothing but symptoms of a cause. The problem is your horse has a lack of respect and it’s showing up in the form of biting. Earn his respect, and you won’t have this issue.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1016_Tip

8 years ago

Training Tip: Water Crossings: Practice Makes Perfect

The key to teaching your horse to navigate any obstacle, including water, is to give him enough practice so that…

Read More
FILES2f20162f022f0223_03.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Walkabout Tour Demo Horses

Spooky horses, hard-to-catch horses, stubborn horses, pushy horses, disrespectful horses, bucking horses, snarly horses, rearing horses, won’t go forward horses…

Read More
0625_05

7 years ago

From the Ground Up

By ABI Attachments Start from the ground up. Sage old advice, and in some cases, it is meant metaphorically, but…

Read More
0324_Tip

6 years ago

Training Tip: Conquer Fear By Focusing On Gaining Control

When a horse respects you as a leader and uses the thinking side of his brain rather than the reactive…

Read More