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Slow down and start them right!
The speed of horse training differs from horse to horse and
from trainer to trainer. As a trainer I am convinced that the slower you
train the faster horses learn. Not only do they learn faster, they learn
with confidence. In my last article "what to expect when sending your horse
for training" published in Aug 2005 I talked about many factors that
influence the speed of the training process. These factors will contribute
to or detract from the progress your horse makes when in training. When
sending a horse out for training there is usually an established time frame
within which the trainer should be able to show a reasonable amount of
progress. Is it realistic to expect the same amount of progress if you are
training your own horse? Is it important to see the same kind of progress?
There are trainers that perform demonstrations that are amazing in how much
they get accomplished in a single session. These demonstrations are often
with young horses with fragile minds. During the demonstrations that I do I
try to qualify that there is sometimes several weeks worth of training that
occurs in 90 minutes. It is important to note that although the horse
performed what was asked of him there are often short cuts taken to achieve
the perception that a horse can be safely started in one lesson. Sometimes
the lessons introduced during a demonstration can take weeks or even months
to become consistent. It is unrealistic to expect a horse to continue to
learn at that pace without mentally shutting down.
I see many people frustrated because their horse is not coming along
quickly. I see other people missing important basics to get a maneuver
accomplished. Some people feel obligated to try and achieve too much in a
lesson because they have seen a professional accomplish "miracles" in an
hour.
Training a horse should take a lifetime. It is the continuous process of
accepting and rejecting information that at times will be rewarding and
other times very frustrating. What is the rush to get your horse broke, and
really what is a broke horse?
If you enjoy the exercise of training and encourage your horse to try to be
a little better each day one day he will do all you ask of him. If you
employ coercive methods or overwhelm your horse with information however
kindly presented the training will develop holes. The horse will learn only
bits and pieces of everything you taught and there will be situations that
he cannot reliably deal with.
Slowing the process down to a pace that is honestly achievable by you and
your horse will usually produce longer lasting results. There should be no
pressure to teach your horse things at the same pace as any other trainer.
Enjoy the training process for what it is. Remember that improvement is just
that improvement. Be encouraged by the little things that your horse does
for you.
Every maneuver a horse performs for us has several parts. If the parts are
taught slowly and correctly when they are assembled the maneuver as a whole
will take care of itself. If the polished maneuver is not working,
correcting the maneuver itself will not fix it. It is one or more of the
parts that is not working and therefore causes the finished product to be
less than perfect. When the maneuver is taught too quickly that the horse's
confidence will suffer. A horse that lacks confidence will continue to be
incorrect. Allow the horse to feel good about accomplishing something.
Lowering your expectations may encourage your horse to continue trying, and
a horse that tries is a horse that will learn. If things are too difficult
because the end result is more important than the process your horse might
quit. When things are never good enough they can get discouraged and start
to make more mistakes. Rushing your goals will make them unrealistic.
Unrealistic goals will become unattainable.
When you are training your horse take the time to evaluate his progress. Is
he better than he was? Is he worse than he was? Either one will be because
of you. Are you discouraged by his lack of progress or pleased with his
effort. If you can keep your approach slow and steady you are more likely to
be satisfied with slow and steady progress. If you want it all right now
there are not too many horses out there that will satisfy you. Enjoy the
process!

Will Clinging 2006 (c)
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