The Pressure’s On
July 21, 2009
How to be more effective in your communication with your horse.
From America’s Horse
AQHA Professional Horseman Curt Pate is a well-known and trusted clinician and trainer. Here, he shares tips for improving your communication with your horse.
Never think “predator-prey relationship”
“Predator-prey” has become a buzzword among many clinicians, and it’s true that horses are prey animals. But we as humans have a choice to act like predators or not.
Have you ever seen someone in a round pen chasing a horse around with a flag or throwing ropes? That person is showing the horse he’s a predator, and really, he’s just teaching the horse distrust, because there is pressure there the horse wants to get away from.
Your tack is an important part of the communication process. Learn more about choosing tack from the “Tack Talk” DVD.
A horse like that, when the going gets tough, he’s going to think about leaving — escaping the pressure — rather than getting through the situation with you.
So instead of putting on an excessive amount of pressure, I think we can give the horse a lot more confidence if he sees humans as a safe place. He doesn’t have to think of us as predators who are going to frighten him.
Teach your horse to accept pressure
Groundwork and, especially, round pen work can come in here. We can teach the horse to move forward off pressure, but there always has to be somewhere to go to get relief, or else we become predators and he gets suspicious of us. The idea is to teach the horse to accept a certain amount of pressure — and respond to it appropriately — without feeling threatened.
What you want to do is apply pressure in small-enough amounts where the horse can think his way out of it. For example, if you want a horse to move off in the round pen, step toward him behind his withers and then adjust your positioning, speed, etc., to get the response you want.
You and your horse could be master communicators. But do you know what he’s saying about the tack you’ve selected for him? Learn about equipment fit when you watch the “Tack Talk” DVD.
The opposite of that would be to throw a rope at a horse to get him to move off. The horse would move off, but it would be just a reaction, and he wouldn’t have thought about what he was doing. He wouldn’t have learned anything. But by stepping toward him and allowing him to think about what you want, the horse will quickly start reacting to smaller and smaller amounts of pressure.
In short: Try to avoid thinking of you and horse in terms of “predator-prey.” Your horses can learn to accept pressure — if you teach them properly.
Get more great tips from Curt Pate in the Training Your Horse For a Better Relationship, with Curt Pate report.
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August 4th, 2009 at 10:22 pm
I have Curt Pate’s dvd and it is excellent. I look forward to receiving his Training Your Horse for a Better Relationship. Thanks in advance.
January 18th, 2010 at 6:02 am
[...] of the horse have depended on its ability to defend itself against predators. The gap between predator and prey still exists, and any relationship between man and horse that is unnatural [...]
June 1st, 2010 at 5:08 pm
Hi folks from Auburn, New York 13021. Your analysis of different situations that we all see daily in the horse business is absolutely maravelous. Given the facdt that no-one knows everything about the Horse, it is very refreshing to be able to zero-in on certain problems with the Pro”s that do it for a living. I can”t Thank you enough, it”s great great reading 7 so important. This is mandatory reaading for our future equestrians. The emphasis is right on the money…. Thanks again so much… Sincerely: Nr. Tom Minnoe
Auburn, new York 13021…….
October 4th, 2010 at 6:31 am
[...] I am a big fan of doing groundwork, you have to remember that once you are on the horse’s back, everything is totally different to [...]
February 1st, 2011 at 9:17 am
[...] circles by adding some straight lines. You accomplish this by changing your body position to apply pressure toward his nose or shoulder, instead of driving his hip. When you’re good at this, you’ll [...]