Change Your
Horse's
Attitude
Sometimes horses just have a bad day, but
other times horses get like they do when
we need a vacation.
When your horse sours on his job, how can
you change your horse's attitude?
Josh Lyons changes his horse's
attitude by using the principles of
correcting the horse's thought instead of
his action and getting the horse to do his
job in a way to solve any type of sour
problem, from a refusal to go into the arena
to refusals to leave a buddy or go onto the
trail.
If a horse doesn't want to go into the
ring, he's either mad about it or
nervous about it," Josh said. "So we
already know the thought-he doesn't want
to go into the ring."
Josh suggested that our first job is to
consider whether there's anything that
we're doing to cause him to feel that
way. Perhaps we're too aggravating with
our cue, or maybe we're tense and
sending him confusing or demanding
signals.
"Next, we have to find the motivator,"
Josh continued. "How can we get that
horse to quit his own job, which is
trying not to get into the ring, and to
work for us by going into the ring?"
Josh does it by working the horse
outside of the arena. By asking the
horse to perform several maneuvers - in
other words, work hard - Josh gets the
horse to look forward to going into the
ring, where he won't have to work as
hard. "After 15 or 20 minutes,
I'll head him toward the ring and I'll
let go," Josh said. "If he goes into the
ring, or even goes up and stops by the
ring, I'll let him rest for a few
minutes to let him know that approaching
the ring was a good thing. I don't scold
him because he stopped." Josh then
repeats the procedure, working the horse
outside of the ring and bringing him
back toward the ring.
"I don't want to kick him into the
ring," Josh said. "I want him to want to
go into that ring. As he's going toward
the ring, if he stops, I give him a
break, turn him around, take him away
from the ring and work him 15-20 more
minutes, assuming that's not too hard
for him at his level of training or
condition. After two, maybe three times
tops, the horse won't stop. He'll
actually pull you into the ring because
he thinks he can rest in there."
Eventually, you should go back to
working the horse in the ring. While you
may think this will make the problem
recur immediately, Josh has found that
it doesn't. "Once you get that 'want
to' attitude built, it doesn't matter
what lesson you're doing," Josh said.
"Your horse will try harder. You've made
him think, 'Is that all you want? Heck,
I can do that.'
"It's not that you'll never have to
teach the lesson again. It's just that
the time in between the corrections gets
longer. At first it might take you an
hour before you have to correct him
again. The second time it might be two
days. The third time might be four days.
The fifth time might be a week. The
sixth time might be a month. You're
always going to have to do it. It's just
that the time in between corrections
gets longer."
You can also use this principle in such
situations as when your horse refuses to
leave a buddy or refuses to go out on
the trail. You work on exercises you
want to improve anyway, gradually
getting the horse farther away from his
buddy or farther out on the trail.
You've figured out his thought and
changed his focus to the job that you're
asking him to do.
When a horse becomes ring sour, Josh
approaches the gate with a positive
attitude, which he transmits to his
horse.
If you encounter resistance, Josh says
it's okay to allow the horse to stop by
the gate. You're in no hurry to enter
the pen. You can ask your horse to work
anywhere.
When Josh rides away, he immediately
puts his horse to work. Outside the
arena, he may practice demanding
maneuvers, thereby changing the
association of what constitutes a work
environment.
As they approach the arena gate again,
Josh lets his horse relax and provides
reassurance. Anticipating a
respite from work, Josh's horse begins
to look forward to easier riding in the
arena. Once inside the
arena, Josh provides his horse an
opportunity to relax. Before long,
his trusty mount is a willing worker
once again.
Bad
Moods
But what about
those days when your horse is just in a
bad mood? Maybe he didn't get as much
breakfast as he thought he should. Or he
spent all night talking to the new horse
in the barn. Why he's cranky doesn't
matter (assuming that he's healthy and
not sore).
"There are two emotions involved when
you're working a horse," Josh said.
"There's the horse's emotion and your
emotion. You can't let the horse's
emotions become yours. Somebody's going
to move, no matter what. Either I'm
going to pick up the horse's attitude,
or the horse is going to adopt mine."
The key, of course, is to convince the
horse to do the moving. As Josh puts it,
we, in effect, tell the horse, "I can
see you're having a bad day. But that
doesn't mean I'm going to have a bad
day."
Realize that while it's okay for your
horse to have a bad day, you're not
going to give into his emotions and lose
your temper. Instead, work on maneuvers,
such as serpentines, that give you
better control over your horse.
"We think that one exercise has to be
for barn sour, another exercise has to
be for ring sour and another exercise
has to be for horses in a bad mood,"
Josh said. "But it's not that way. You
can do any exercise you want. It doesn't
make a difference. Working on any
exercise improves the horse's
performance, which earns him a reward,
and that improves his attitude."
Ironically, once you've successfully
worked through your horse's bad day,
you'll often find that the two of you
work better than ever together the next
day.
"The next day the horse may be amazingly
better, but you don't know why," Josh
said. "Well, it's because of the day
before. Even though you thought you had
a bad day, you really got a lot
accomplished and you got a lot better
control of your horse. So those bad days
are really good days because you get
more accomplished than you think. It
might not feel that way that day, but it
will feel that way tomorrow."
Bottom Line
Josh's three-step lesson can help you
solve many problems with your horse.
1. Focus on the horse's thought and
correct the thought before it becomes an
incorrect action.
2. Offer your horse enough incentive so
that he'll come to work for you instead
of against you.
3. Apply those two principles to your
"sour" problems by anticipating his
thought and giving him enough work to do
that he will focus on the work and not
the problem.
These three steps will keep your horse's
blue Mondays down to a minimum so that
the two of you can enjoy your time
together.
Story by Tracy
Gantz