Post by themusical on Jan 10, 2006 18:14:02 GMT -5
TRAINING
What we believe about teaching horses...
The object of natural horsemanship training is to get the horse to do what we want it to do, when we want it to do it. We use respect, communication and trust rather than fear and intimidation to advance that goal for horse and rider and to accomplish all safely!
- We prefer to create a respectful relationship between ourselves and the horse rather than having a relationship where we always dominate and the horse always submits.
- The horse knows all the things we want it to do, we don’t teach it anything new. We only teach horses to do the things it already knows, at the time we want them to do it.
- We believe horses have a highly developed sense of what is fair and what is not.
- The horse should have the opportunity to have his say.
- All of our relationships, with people and horses are based on respect. Sometimes you have to give respect in order to get respect, other times you have to demand respect and settle for nothing less.
- If you are being unsuccessful teaching your horse, the first thing to look at is whether the horse understands what you want, next examine whether you are providing leadership and whether there is an appropriate level of respect between you.
- Horses look for reliable leaders.
- Horses live in the moment.
- When you get on a horse, they read your mind and they read your butt. They know whether you are comfortable or uncomfortable, how much you have ridden and who is going to be in charge of the ride that day.
- Horses are natural followers who look for leaders. If we don’t lead, the horse will.
- Your horse won’t know what you want him to do unless you have a clear picture in your mind as to what it is you want.
- Horses are individuals, what works with one may not work on the next; we have to be flexible in our approach. If one technique doesn’t work don’t push it, try something else.
- We try for clear communication with the horse about what we want. If the horse is unclear and makes guesses about what we want we don’t punish him for making a guess that is not what we want. We want to encourage him to use his mind.
- Sometimes you just have to stop and let what you are asking the horse to learn soak in.
- Make sure to praise the horse when he has done what you want him to do.
- Know when to stop.
- There comes a point where the horse has learned all he can learn in that session, find a place where both you and the horse have been successful and stop.
- Horses don’t have the same sense of time we do, the horse doesn’t care if you have an appointment later, or if the pot roast needs to go in the oven at a certain time.
- To successfully teach horses we need to work on horse time not our time.
- Setting overall goals for you and your horse is appropriate. When you set very specific goals for an individual teaching session you are setting yourself, and your horse, up for failure.
- The highest form of horsemanship is when the horse follows a feel, which you create. In other words, the horse follows with his mind, what you have visualized in your mind.
Unhaltered Colt through 90 days Under Saddle
We halter, bridle, saddle, and generally train your horse in your chosen discipline until they have been under saddle successfully for 90 days.
Unhaltered Filly or Gelded Colt through 90 days Under Saddle
We halter, bridle, saddle, and generally train your horse in your chosen discipline until they have been under saddle successfully for 90 days.
Unhaltered Colt through 60 days Under Saddle
We halter, bridle, saddle, and generally train your horse in your chosen discipline until they have been under saddle for 60 days.
Unhaltered Filly or Gelded Colt through 60 days Under Saddle
We halter, bridle, saddle, and generally train your horse in your chosen discipline until they have been under saddle for 60 days.
"Follow-Up" Training
After your horse has completed 60-90 days under saddle, more advanced work in your chosen discipline is trained.
"Move-Up" Training
For a specific discipline, for example, if you want to move up a level in dressage or get higher Reining scores, this is good.
Advanced Training
Get your horse trained to the highest level possible in your discipline.
Trust Training/Rehabilitation
If you have a horse that has been abused or just doesn't trust humans, this is great for them.
Other training IS available, but these are the main ones.
We DO request that you be very active in your horses training, to tell us if we are doing anything different that the way you want it to be done, like aids and things.
Please note that we only train English. No Western.