Holding Your Reins
March 20, 2012
AQHA Professional Horseman Bennie Sargent shows you how to achieve power steering.
Your reins should create a straight line from your elbow to your horse’s mouth.
When the reins get too long, your hands are either too low or they get up way too high. You lose your leverage, your guide and effectiveness.
Your reins are a steering wheel. A horse carries most of his weight in his front end, so most of your guide and your balance is in the front.
You want light contact on the horse’s mouth and drive from his hind end.
Use your leg as your gas pedal to control how much drive you want. Keep an even amount of pressure on your horse, and do not move your legs back and forth.
I have kids who ask me all the time, “Are my reins short enough?” and yeah, standing there they are, but in the pen when you’re moving, you have to feel and be able to adjust your reins for whatever maneuver you’re performing at the time.
Whether you are showing in pleasure, horsemanship or western riding, there’s no set amount of pressure. It’s give and take.
Learn how to tie your horse safely with AQHA’s FREE Report How to Tie a Lead Rope.
Too Much Pressure
Release when your horse gives, and take hold when he takes hold. If you take hold of a horse and feel that he has not given to you, and you pull just a little bit more, that’s probably enough pressure
Just be patient and keep working. If you jerk on a horse, he is going to be resentful to that much pressure all at once. There is not an actual pound or amount of pressure that you need to pull. You just have to feel whether the horse is giving to you or not. When you take hold and feel him giving at the bar and in the poll, you have pulled enough. If you pull really hard and feel your horse pull back, you have over-pulled.
Of course, horses are individuals, just like people, and some are going to take less pressure, and some are going to take more. What a rider has to learn is to find that happy compromise in between. Horses that have been overtrained or mistrained are sometimes a little harder because they already learned an incorrect way. Sometimes you need to go back and just use a snaffle bit. Do a lot of side to side work, and use different pressure points. If that doesn’t work, go to a gag bit where you put more pressure on the poll instead of the mouth. The most important thing to remember is to trust your horse and trust yourself with a less severe bit.
Download the How to Tie a Lead Rope report for FREE!
The Certified Horsemanship Association has produced a video to help give you a few more tips on rein holds. The purpose of CHA is to promote excellence in safety and education for the benefit of the horse industry.
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4 Comments on “Holding Your Reins”
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March 20th, 2012 at 8:32 am
This saves alot of space for storing book,s
Thank,s Friend,s
March 20th, 2012 at 12:14 pm
The best way that I learned to train a horse to give in the poll and give to the bit is to start a horse on a bosal hackamore then go to a snaffle bit. Reminber to carry your hands low and pull from a low position. Too many people carry their hands up high next to their chest. This will make the horse ‘high headed’, what we call a star gazer.
March 20th, 2012 at 3:32 pm
Brilliant. Am transitioning from English to western and no instructors in my area.
March 23rd, 2012 at 9:53 pm
Very nice demonstration. Thanks very much. Will have to track down other CHA videos.