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Saturday, April 23, 2011

How to install a brake on your horse

How to install a brake on your horse

Imagine on a horse and he bolts. You pull the reins to slow him down but is not used. It is resistant and fence posts will rain by you as you panic and pray he is not shifting his body weight and you fly back on a position.

It's scary to be on a horse that runs on its own initiative and may slow down. Many people sell their horse because they are so afraid of what passes again. How do you keep a horse bolting like that?

There is a way to moderate your horse, even if he sees something that frightens him and he wants to run in fear. I call it, "install an emergency brake application."

This is done on the ground, while you are training ground. Whenever you work with your horse you must pass a few minutes doing so - even if you know your horse "gets it". It simply cannot be done enough.

What it looks like when you use the emergency brake on your horse? While you are visiting, you will reach down to a kidney. Closely, you take the kidney, drag until your legs along the boundary of your pants up to your hips. At the same time, you are vaguely another kidney. As you do, the nose of your horse will be pointing to his rear.

Why this work? Never try to run before to look back? I say more? (There are exceptions.) Some horses is so flexible that they will run forward with their noses buried in their sides - but not very much)

But you can simply get on your horse and expect to draw his head if it takes off. You must perform some work of field first. And here's what you do.

Put a your horse Halter and hooking a rope lead rope. Standing on the left side of your horse. Stand by your horse from his leg back. Take your right arm and place it on its rump. Then, pull the rope to lead you and rest your left hand on his back.

At the time your horse will withstand some. If he pulls his head forward, you hold the rope of lead in place. It will be finally turning his head to you and give the attraction you have on the lead rope. The second, he moves his head toward you, then release you the tension of the lead rope and praise him. In other words, when you see the lead rope is slack in it because he moved his nose to you, and then release.

Finally, you want him touching his nose to his body. It is the objective that you're shooting for because that more head comes around the control better that you. Also, there is a second goal, that you are shooting. When you pull the cord of lead autour to bring the head of your horse back, you want to be where you pull. It moves the head for you. That you pull the lead rope to its head moves back with no effort from you. His head follows. It is called to respond. This is important because when you go your horse and you have to remove his head around you does not want to have a tug of war while you are mounted on a horse bolting. You want him to do so automatically.

First your horse will not able to touch his nose to his body. If you start with small successes. First pull you his head back to you until you get resistance. When you do this, hold the lead rope tension. Do not do more or less of the tension, simply hold it. The second, he returned to you more and creates the slack in the rope of lead, give you immediate relief and take pressure off the coast of the rope of lead completely. Then you say it was a good boy. Animal also. Let know that this is what you want.

As you do, you can allows him to bring his head farther and farther back until it begins to touch his nose to his body. Do not try to touch his nose to his body in the first one or two sessions of soil. Who is rushing it, and you probably did do it. It takes time to get your horse to understand what you want him to.

Don't forget to do too across your horse. What your horse can do on its left side, it should be able to do on his right side.

When you have your horse touch his nose at his side, you are ready to get on him and test his emergency brake. Get your horse and go take a test ride. If he starts to run and you do not want him, grab a kidney and take his head autour. Not jerk the reins... pull. Then boot him in a circle. When he slows down or stops as you want it and then release the pressure. Don't forget to tighten the reins of left and rights.

If your horse does not easily touch his nose to his body while riding on it, you need to make it more practical. Also, until you go riding him touch his nose a few times on each side with the bit in his mouth. Do these things to shake your riding in a pleasant experience.

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