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The Reliable Horse.
The last couple of articles I wrote were on understanding horses when they
are confused and resistant. Ultimately what most of us want from our horse
is for them to be reliable.
The key to having a reliable horse is understanding what makes a horse
reliable. To help a horse become reliable we need to encourage our horse to
try, to think, to understand, to be responsible, to be confidant, and to
deal with stress. It is important to have all of these things individually
but they are so interconnected that when one of them starts to develop they
all start to develop. If all of these things happen the training will almost
take care of itself.
When a horse tries he shows his willingness to learn. Assuming the horse
does not know what we want If we notice the smallest effort from the
slightest cue and reward it we will encourage the horse to keep trying.
Initially it is not important that your horse is correct only that he tries
to be correct. When we ask for movement he may not do what we want but any
movement that is remotely correct shows effort. With effort we can then
direct the movement more specifically until he tries something different.
The different movement will then get rewarded or not based on whether it was
more correct than the last time. This continues until the horse performs
what we wanted him to.
Through this process the horse has also been encouraged to think. He knows
his recent action got a reward so he will try it again the next time I ask.
When it doesn’t work and he tries something different he has to think to
realize that what he tried last time no longer got the release. This process
of rewarding very little should also encourage deliberate movement. If he
starts over reacting you are possibly using too much pressure. This is when
confusion is setting in. Even a little can be too much and because you are
looking for very little movement he will respond to a very subtle request.
The less pressure you use the smaller a response you can expect until he is
sure what you want. If your horse continues to overreact you should back up
to the last thing your horse did right and start the process again. If his
movement is deliberate and smooth he is thinking about what he is doing and
what you are asking.
When the thought process is encouraged and your horse’s movement has become
smooth and consistent he then understands what was expected. If you do not
have consistency you do not have understanding.
Consistency and understanding will develop responsibility. When you then ask
your horse to perform on cue it is his responsibility to do his best. He
should continue to perform until you ask him to do otherwise. His best may
not be great but it may be the best he is capable of on that given day. It
is important not to give him more responsibility than he can handle. Less
assertive horses need less responsibility than strong willed horses. If you
give a strong horse too much he will think he is in charge and you will lose
some of your authority with him.
When a horse accepts responsibility for his actions he is well on his way to
being confident. Confidence can be slow to develop and is very fragile. When
a horse is really confident he will believe in himself and he will believe
in you.
Confidence will now give your horse the courage to deal with stress.
Everything we do with our horse is stressful. Handling, training, housing,
feeding, and transportation are major stress factors. He needs to know that
he can cope when he is alone and when he is with you. If he is coping with
whatever stress he is under his movement will be deliberate. It will stay
deliberate because he has confidence in you because you gave him the
responsibility to think. This will allow him to understand that if he tries
he will get rewarded.

Will Clinging 2006 (c)
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