What I'd Teach Your Horse
By Keith Hosman
()
About this ebook
Question: "I just bought a horse. What do I do now?"
Answer: "Buy my book, 'What I'd Teach Your Horse.'"
If I had a dollar for every email I get asking "what to do" to make a riding horse out of the mare Uncle Emo just traded for the old RV - or how to retrain a horse that's grown rusty - or some version on either theme, I'd be the world's first gazillionaire. With the publication of this book then, I'm hoping to grab that distinction.
If you broke your horse to saddle and rode it for the first time yesterday, this book (chapter 1) is where you'd start tomorrow. If you have an older horse and you've taught him everything you know and he still don't know nothin', this book is where you'd start, (chapter 2). It's a roadmap to building the foundation every horse needs, regardless of age, breed or background, regardless of what you've got ultimately planned for that horse.
Afterwards, when your horse knows this book back to front, go train for barrels, roping, eventing, jumping or dressage. But today, basics are basics.
Section I is the stuff your horse needs to know. Section II is the stuff (the theory) you need to know. Practice the first handful of chapters in order, as written. Beyond that, you should feel free to mix and match depending on your needs or abilities. Some chapters are dependent upon others - but in those cases, I've spelled out necessary prerequisites.
Contents:
SECTION I: BASICALLY TRAINING YOUR HORSE
- Legs Mean Move (Step 1 if This Is "Day 2" for Your Young Horse)
- Hip Control, Part I
- Hip Control, Part II
- Classic Serpentine
- Train Your Horse to Travel Straight
- Clockwork: How to Teach Anything to Your Horse
- Shoulder Control
- The Reverse Arc Circle
- How to Fix Leaning Shoulders
- Serpentine: Indirect to Direct
- Speed Control
- Slow Down, Part I: Move the Hip
- Slow Down, Part II: Wherein We Train the Brain
- Balky Horses: Comatose One Minute, Hot to Trot the Next
- Crossing Creeks and Scary Stuff
- Teach Your Horse to Lower Its Head While Standing
- Better Back Ups
- Simple Steps to Power Steering
- Diagonal Movement ("Leg Yields Without the Legs")
- Softening
- Getting Leads
- A Fix for Cross-Firing (aka "Cross-Cantering")
- Hips, Get Behind the Shoulders (And Stay Put)
- Hips-in (aka "Haunches-in" or "Travers")
- Neck Reining How-To
SECTION II: TEACHING YOU, THE THEORY BEHIND THE PRACTICE
- The First Thing I Do
- Each Time You Mount Up, Do This
- How to Pick Up Your Reins Like a Pro
- Training Magic: Release on the Thought
- What You're Feeling For
- Reins Tell Direction, Legs Tell Speed
- Talking Horse
- See Yourself Leading When Riding
- Perfect the First Time
- Six Easy Ways to Improve Your Training
- Rider Checklists
- Diagnosing Problems
Second Edition
Keith Hosman
John Lyons Certified Trainer Keith Hosman lives near San Antonio, TX and divides his time between writing how-to training materials and conducting training clinics in most of these United States as well as in Germany and the Czech Republic. Visit horsemanship101.com for more D.I.Y. training and to find a clinic happening near you. Other books from Keith Hosman: - Crow Hopper's Big Guide to Buck Stopping - Get On Your Horse: Curing Mounting Problems - Horse Tricks - How to Start a Horse: Bridling to 1st Ride - Rein In Your Horse's Speed - Round Penning: First Steps to Starting a Horse - Trailer Training - What I'd Teach Your Horse, Training & Re-Training the Basics - What Is Wrong with My Horse? - When Your Horse Rears... How to Stop It - Your Foal: Essential Training
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What I'd Teach Your Horse - Keith Hosman
What I'd Teach Your Horse
Training & Re-Training the Basics
Keith Hosman, John Lyons Certified Trainer
Copyright
What I'd Teach Your Horse
by Keith Hosman
Copyright 2012 Keith Hosman, First Edition
Copyright 2014-2016 Keith Hosman, Second Edition
ISBN: 9781301819744, Smashwords Edition
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Please note: The information appearing in this publication is presented for educational purposes only. In no case shall the publishers or authors be held responsible for any use readers may choose to make, or not to make, of this information.
Keith Hosman
horsemanship101.com
PO Box 31
Utopia, TX 78884 USA
033116 2.1
Table of Contents
Copyright
Preface
Section I
Legs Mean Move (Step 1 if This Is Day 2
for Your Young Horse)
Hip Control, Part I
Hip Control, Part II
Classic Serpentine
Train Your Horse to Travel Straight
Clockwork: How to Teach Anything to Your Horse
Shoulder Control
The Reverse Arc Circle
How to Fix Leaning Shoulders
Serpentine: Indirect to Direct
Speed Control
Slow Down, Part I: Move the Hip
Slow Down, Part II: Wherein We Train the Brain
Balky Horses: Comatose One Minute, Hot to Trot the Next
Crossing Creeks and Scary Stuff
Teach Your Horse to Lower Its Head While Standing
Better Back Ups
Simple Steps to Power Steering
Diagonal Movement (Leg Yields Without the Legs
)
Softening
Getting Leads
A Fix for Cross-Firing (aka Cross-Cantering
)
Hips, Get Behind the Shoulders (And Stay Put)
Hips-in (aka Haunches-in
or Travers
)
Neck Reining How-To
Section II
The First Thing I Do
Each Time You Mount Up, Do This
How to Pick Up Your Reins Like a Pro
Training Magic: Release on the Thought
What You're Feeling For
Reins Tell Direction, Legs Tell Speed
Talking Horse
See Yourself Leading When Riding
Perfect the First Time
6 Easy Ways to Improve Your Training
Rider Checklists
Diagnosing Problems
Books By and From This Author
Meet the Author: Keith Hosman
Preface
Question: I just bought a horse. What do I do now?
Answer: Buy my book, 'What I'd Teach Your Horse.'
If I had a dollar for every email I get asking what to do
to make a riding horse out of the mare Uncle Emo just traded for the old RV—or how to retrain a horse that's grown rusty—or some version on either theme, I'd be the world's first gazillionaire. With the publication of this book then, I'm hoping to grab that distinction.
If you broke your horse to saddle and got on it for the first time yesterday, this book (chapter 1) is where you'd start tomorrow. If you have an older horse and you've taught him everything you know and he still don't know nothin', this book is where you'd start, (chapter 2). It's a road map to building the foundation every horse needs, regardless of age, breed or background, regardless of what you've got ultimately planned for that horse.
Afterward, when your horse knows this book back to front, go train for barrels, roping, eventing, jumping or dressage. But today, basics are basics.
Section I is the stuff your horse needs to know. Section II is the stuff (the theory) you need to know. Practice the first handful of chapters in order, as written. Beyond that, you should feel free to mix and match depending on your needs or abilities. Some chapters are dependent upon others—but in those cases, I've spelled out necessary prerequisites.
Good luck in your training!
Keith Hosman
John Lyons Certified Trainer
Utopia, Texas USA
Section I
Basically training your horse
Legs Mean Move
(Step 1 if This Is Day 2
for Your Young Horse)
Your young and very green horse has learned to pack a saddle and you've sat on it once or twice—but you'd like to do something more than sit there and wave at your friends as they ride off. You want a horse that... moves. Here's what to do.
If the only experience your horse has with you as a rider is you strapping on a saddle then climbing up there and sitting, then the logical next step is to teach cues for movement. You'll take up your training with this chapter. If your horse is beyond such basics, skip ahead; begin your training in the next chapter.
Here we'll assume that you're breaking a young, green horse who has become accustomed to carrying a saddle around and to you climbing on and off at least fifty times.
With a horse in such an early, early stage of training, we will not initially use our legs to ask for movement. Kicking a young, scared horse is a certain ticket to a bucking adventure. Nor will we cue the horse in the beginning with a kiss for two reasons: 1) We don't (yet) have a way to force the horse to move if we kiss and it just stands there; we haven't made the connection in the horse's mind between the rein and moving his legs. If it ignores our cue and then we can't get the feet moving, we've taught it that the cue means nothing. 2) Horses at this stage are often looking for things to be scared of—you don't want to do anything that might unnecessarily startle the horse and cause a wreck. Instead, we'll use our reins, then slowly mix in our cues and motivators, our kisses and bumps.
Begin by asking your horse to keep his head off to the side by several inches: Pick up one rein and take your horse's head to the side, let's say to the left, then let go of the rein. (See the chapter How to Pick Up Your Reins Like a Pro
for tips on rein handling, specifically the section on one-handed rein exercises
) When the horse brings his head back forward, pick up your rein and bring his head back to the left, releasing again when he does. It is important to understand that you are not holding his head in place with constant pressure. You are to drop your rein each time his head moves to the side. Why? Because if you pulled his head over and locked it there, he might feel trapped and react in kind. But also because if your horse begins to associate his movement with your pressure on the reins, it will always require pressure to get the horse to move. We want the horse to move with no pressure on the reins.
In time, your horse will tire of having his head off to one side and he'll move his body to line up, in effect straightening
his neck. He'll move his hips to the right if you'd picked up the left rein and vice versa. Repeat this sequence until the horse realizes that you will allow him to keep his head forward when he moves his feet.
Keep your gestures simple, calm and fluid—far, far away from reprimanding or demanding.
But, don't be so calm that your horse forgets you're there. You want to stay active. You don't want to sit quietly for a bit then reach for the rein only to have the horse realize with a start that something's on his back. Actively work to keep your existence remembered. You can talk to the horse so he can hear you, you can change your posture, you can adjust the reins—don't let the horse forget you're there. (And if you want to pet your horse, let'm know it's coming: Lightly tap the saddle, then tap the edge of the saddle, then tap the horse near the saddle... work your way out toward it's head or back end. Suddenly reaching back and patting that backside will get you launched.)
While the horse might move any or all of his four feet to start, what you'll likely notice is that he'll most often move his back end to do the lining up,
it's only logical. Let's use that; let's start getting specific responses to very specific requests. In your mind, place a one inch dot anywhere on your horse's left hip and then on its right hip. (Better yet, get a cattle marker and make your marks for real.) Now you will concentrate solely on moving those dots to their left or right.
Start each sequence by saying out loud to the horse Move the dot on your left hip to the left
or Move the dot on your right hip to the right.
As you've seen, the left rein will cause the hips to move to their right, the right rein causes them to move left. Practice that now: Pick up your left rein, concentrate on the right dot, say move right.
Bring the horse's head to its left and insist that it keep its head to the side until it moves that dot in the chosen direction (to the right, in this example) to any small degree. Repeat and practice in both directions.
(Here's another good reason to start with the back legs: If your horse were to start bucking or to lurch unexpectedly, you would want to react by bringing its hips over, lessening the driving power it can put into each hop. Getting control over that back end, then, is a smart first move on your part.)
When your horse will reliably move it's hips (and, hence, its back feet) to both the right and left, change your focus to the front feet. Place your dots
on the left and right shoulders. Follow the same thinking and pattern, except this time use the rein on the same side as the dot you'd like to see move, (a direct rein
). Say out loud move the dot on your right shoulder to the right,
then pick up the right rein and bring the head to the side and release. Keep bringing the head back to the side and concentrating on your dot until it moves to the side (not forward, not backward, but to the side). If the horse stalls out at anytime, get the back feet to move. Don't allow it, if at all possible, to start hanging on that rein. By contrast, the other three dots you've placed might move (and move and move)—but just ignore that until your chosen dot moves correctly. Only then release.
Practice moving the shoulders and hips-in a myriad of combinations and in a short while, what you'll find is that the horse simply stays moving. He might do this because he finds walking easier than a constant barrage of requests from you to move this shoulder, then that hip, but regardless, now you have a way to cause the horse to move.
As you ride, don't try to steer. Any amount of rein handling causes the horse to slow, so just meander and only use your reins to get the horse moving. Do what you gotta do to keep the horse moving out fluidly. See yourself as the fans in the stands at a baseball game, working to keep a giant beach ball in constant play above their heads.
When you can dependably get both the shoulders and the hips to move with your rein, begin teaching the kiss cue
and the leg bump motivator.
First, get your horse moving. Then, AFTER moving a few steps, kiss. Move... kiss. Bring the horse to a stop by asking the hips to step to the side. Practice just that sequence, kissing to your horse only after it's already moving. Try not to go very far before bringing the horse to a stop. Traveling only short distances will help keep the horse's body more rounded and give you a bit more control if something should spook it. Were it to become startled, you'd want to bring the hips around to draw power from those back legs. If the body was rock solid straight (and the horse pointed directly forward), he'd be in a better position to push through anything you might do to bring him back under control
Next, add the leg bump: Ask the horse to move and kiss to it after a few strides. Seconds later, bump lightly with both legs. Travel a few more beats, then bring the hips around to stop. Again, practice this sequence, first getting movement, then kissing, next bumping, stop with a turn of the hips. When your horse has become accustomed to your kiss and leg bumps as it travels, begin kissing then bumping just as your horse moves off.
Next, introduce the kiss and bump
from a standstill. Remember that a kiss is a cue (it asks for something) while your legs apply motivation (they say Hey, you missed that kiss. Move now or I'll irritate you with this incessant thump, thump, thump
). From a stand still, pick up and move your reins forward (a sort of pre-cue
) and kiss. If the horse doesn't move forward, bump. If the horse doesn't move off the bump, then use your reins to bring the back legs around or step the front legs across. Do something to get movement—do not let the horse learn to ignore your requests. In short order, your horse will begin moving off your kiss to avoid the bump he learns is sure to follow.
Finally, add the following to your sequence: When you kiss to initiate movement, simultaneously drop your legs against the horse, wrapping them briefly around the barrel with the weight of two wet towels. One half-second after making contact, let your legs fall back away, carried away by gravity. Follow this with a bump only if the horse ignores your kiss cue.
Throughout training sessions that follow, work on solidifying the sequence described. Beyond your horse's training, you need to really drill on the pattern, creating muscle memory for you the rider. Pick up the reins, kiss, wrap your legs, allow your legs to fall away. Bump if ya gotta. Later in your horse's career, the wrapping legs
will act as a pre-cue, signaling to him that he needs to round his body and collect up.
The more heads-up you give the horse, the more natural and correct his movements will be.
Your job here, as you prep for later days and more advanced work, is to teach the horse to think forward, to move with an even cadence, and to keep moving until I say otherwise.
Begin by teaching the sequence: I pick up the reins, kiss, and briefly round up my legs and you move off. I bump if you miss the cue to move.
Keep the horse moving smoothly. Don't stop at fences or to sniff the backsides of other horses. Find an even rhythm in your gait and work to maintain that flow. Don't be thrown by the horse nearing fences, other horses or any other immovable objects. If he slows, time your thumping to keep him moving. If you allow him to approach a fence in his wanderings and stop just two times, he'll start looking for fences like a dog hunting rabbits. If he's pointed straight at a fence, keep thumping till he moves. Keep him moving and you'll soon be in a position for more advanced work. (And always return to an earlier point in your training anytime your horse becomes unduly anxious or otherwise slow to learn.)
End of Legs Mean Move
Hip Control, Part I
Control of your horse's hips is the key to all the stuff your horse can do.
Here we start unlocking your horse's potential with a few basic and easy exercises.
The ability to control your horse's hips is paramount in any training program. It's where we begin training the green horse, the key you'll need to unlock stuff your horse can do.
Stuff like turning; that's an obvious example. (Turn the hips, turn the horse.) But hip control is also critical to gaining shoulder control in the early stages of training and to more advanced maneuvers later on such as the flying lead change or correcting dropped shoulders. Vital to schooling the young, sometimes-rambunctious green horse, it also lends the ability to shut your bronc down when it gains too much speed or to force a change of direction when he's thinking left and you're thinking right.
We'll begin with a quick ground lesson before getting you into the saddle.
Put a headstall, reins and