| Have you ever tried to
get your horse to go somewhere (like through a door or in
a trailer) and he rears as he approaches?
In this case, the rearing is a symptom of a problem.
The horse is showing resistance and fear - plus a lack of
respect for the handler's direction.
To solve this, you must do groundwork away from the spooky
object.
You'll want to do exercises that will get him to expand his
comfort level AND get his feet moving forward.
We want the horse to learn to move his feet forward (not
up) when he feels his life is threatened.
Now when the horse rears, DO NOT pull down on his head.
Why?
Because it could make him rear even higher and perhaps fall
backwards. He could even pull you back and land on you.
Plus, the horse will have experienced BIG TIME trauma - and
man oh man...that will be hard to fix.
If the horse rears, get away from him moving to his side.
One BIG secret is to be ready for him to do it. Think ahead
of him.
If he starts to spring up, pull his head around and move
his hindquarters.
Why?
Because if you're a horse, it's pretty dang hard to rear
up when your hindquarters are moving and your head is turned.
When he sees he can't rear, he'll even- tually learn to go
forward when feeling troubled.
He will discover it's not so bad to move his feet forward
and that he'll be okay.
He likely won't learn to move forward the first few times
you draw his head around and move his hindquarters...but he'll
get it eventualy.
Just keep at it until he does - stay consistent.
If you've ever ridden a horse that rears, you'd know it can
be scary and dangerous.
You should know how to prevent it.
In some horse training videos from http://www.SuperStarsOfHorseTraining.com,
there are a couple trainers. To learn more about how they
train their horses, be sure to read about them.
About The Author
Andy Curry is a nationally known horse trainer and author
of several best selling horse training and horse care books.
He is also well known for finding, interviewing, and filming
expert horse trainers and making their expertise available
to horse owners who want to learn different horse training
tips and secrets and how to solve behaviorial issues with
horses. For information visit his website at www.SuperStarsofHorseTraining.com.
|