Training Archives - Little Gray Mare https://littlegraymare.com/category/training/ The journey to calm and connected horse and human Sun, 25 Feb 2024 17:00:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 https://i0.wp.com/littlegraymare.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/cropped-167531748_10157939010920267_8202058148374229622_n.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Training Archives - Little Gray Mare https://littlegraymare.com/category/training/ 32 32 196554542 How to Make an Easy Water Box for Your Horse https://littlegraymare.com/how-to-make-an-easy-water-box-for-your-horse/ https://littlegraymare.com/how-to-make-an-easy-water-box-for-your-horse/#respond Sun, 25 Feb 2024 17:00:30 +0000 https://littlegraymare.com/?p=287 We have been working on obstacle course ideas for a while now. We’ve made a carwash, and a gate, and even a push bar. What Goose really needs to work …

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We have been working on obstacle course ideas for a while now. We’ve made a carwash, and a gate, and even a push bar. What Goose really needs to work on before we head to our scheduled obstacle course competition this spring is WATER. Goose does NOT like the water. The last time she ecountered the water box at the obstacle course she jumped it. I’ve been working on introducing her to water in different ways. We went to the lake last week and I got her to put her feet in the water under saddle for the first time. I’ve gotten her to walk through puddles here at home on the driveway, but a water box is a totally different thing.

We plan to build an actual waterbox this summer, but to get us started we picked up a dog splash pad. You can increase and decrease the level of difficulty just by turning the water up or down a bit. Goose was a little leary at first but she did manage to walk through it and then stop and put her feet in and paw a little bit. All good first steps.

The splash pad is holding up well so far. We’ve worked all 5 of our horses through it. We’ve had barefoot horses go through it as well as horses with shoes and it’s still going strong.

You can see in this picture with Goose we had the water pressure very low so it was a pool with not very much water sprinkler effect.

When you want to challenge your horse a little more you can turn up the water pressure and it can go as high as you want it to go.

My daughter’s amazing mare Nora didn’t think twice about walking through this pool of water so we upped the pressure for her. She took that in stride as well.

I look forward to the day that Goose is as willing and brave and Nora. πŸ™‚

@little.gray.mare

Got a new water toy today. We had no sprinkler coming out to start and the horses were struggling. Nora stepped up and said let me show you how it’s done. #redmare

♬ How We Roll – Ciara & Chris Brown

We plan to create an obstacle area in this part of our property, so eventually a wooden permanent water box will go in here, but to get started right now, this is a great, inexpensive way to work on getting your horse to cross water.

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Gentling Delilah https://littlegraymare.com/gentling-delilah/ https://littlegraymare.com/gentling-delilah/#respond Wed, 25 Aug 2021 15:45:03 +0000 https://littlegraymare.com/?p=64 Hanna had just finished her second Blaze’s Tribute Trainer’s Challenge, and her horse, Irish Red, was sold at the auction, to a woman who loves him more than most things. …

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Hanna had just finished her second Blaze’s Tribute Trainer’s Challenge, and her horse, Irish Red, was sold at the auction, to a woman who loves him more than most things. <3 She had a her first client horse in for training, so yeah, let’s throw an unhandled mare from the auction in the mix. Heck, why not?

We went to the auction just to see how things ran, what kind of horses they had available, prices things went for etc. We had been talking about getting horses and having Hanna train them, then selling them to good homes, but we really didn’t mean now. Well, maybe we did since we took a trailer with us. *eye roll*

It was our first time at the sale. We walked through the pens, looked at the horses available. Checked conformation. Wrote down numbers. Made a list of possibilities. And then everything went out the window when the auction started. I had a hard time keeping up with the auctioneer and actually knowing what the bid was at.

We had our eye on a gorgeous gray horse. It came up for bid and I thought it was at 3 THOUSAND… unfortunately, for us, it was at 300. We missed that one. Then Delilah came in. A cute little red dunn. She was not on our list. She was not on our minds. But I got a feeling about her and we bid, and we got her!

We paid and went out back to get her in the trailer.

If you are on Tik Tok… you know the OH NO sound. That was my feeling. My belly dropped out and I immediately had some buyers remorse. She was completely unhandled and seemed fairly unhinged. They boxed her in a corner and got a halter on her (backwards), and then ran her through into the trailer.

She actually stood quite well in the trailer on the way home. When we arrived home we opened the trailer door and let her out into the pen.

She was terrified of people. Reactive. Resource gaurded. A little kicky.

What had we done? My anxiety was through the roof about this horse.

This is the first unhandled horse we’ve had. The first time Hanna would work on halter breaking, leading, all the beginning things, and honestly, I felt like we were in well over our heads.

Ryan, on the other hand, Mr Calm, Cool and Collected. He just walked right in and started making friends with her. She warmed up to him pretty quickly, and would let him pet her. He got the first hug. πŸ™‚

Hanna started working with her, but it was very up and down. She overreacted to everything, and it was kind of scary. The things Hanna knew weren’t really working. So Delilah sat. And ate. We petted on her through the fence. Ryan went in and petted on her and fed her treats LOL. It wasn’t part of the plan to leave her sitting for a month, but in the end I think it was one of the best things we could have done.

It was sometime in July I was watching Horse.TV and found a series called the “Horse Guru”. We watched the whole thing and kind of fell in love with Michael Gascon and his training techniques. We signed up for his membership site and began watching all the videos. With a new way of looking at things Hanna went back out and started with Delilah again.

This time… magic happened.

I don’t know if it was Michael’s stuff, or the time off, but everything started clicking.

She got her halter broke and giving to pressure.

She got her leading.

She got her desensitized and calm enough to do just about anything with her.

She got her lifting her front feet, and had a good visit with the farrier.

She took her outside the pen for the first time. Introduced her to obstacles.

Next up is saddling and riding. She’s already making plans to take her to a fun show to start introducing her to new places.

She is going to make someone a really good little mare. Hanna continues to work with her. If you’d like to follow their progress you can follow their facebook page Gentling Delilah.

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How To Catch a Hard to Catch Horse https://littlegraymare.com/how-to-catch-a-hard-to-catch-horse/ https://littlegraymare.com/how-to-catch-a-hard-to-catch-horse/#respond Wed, 18 Aug 2021 22:32:46 +0000 https://littlegraymare.com/?p=60 From day 1 Goose has been a hard to catch horse. There have been times it’s taken us HOURS to catch her. She’s gotten better over time, but she still …

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From day 1 Goose has been a hard to catch horse. There have been times it’s taken us HOURS to catch her. She’s gotten better over time, but she still has a mind of her own and likes to use it. πŸ™‚

I don’t really consider myself a horse trainer, but I’ve spent the last 3 1/2 years studying horse training. I’ve joined multiple membership sites for different trainers, I’ve read articles, the biggest piece though is implementation. I usually share the knowledge I’ve acquired with Hanna and she does the training. But Goose is my horse now, and I feel strongly that she and I work together to become a better team.

Every time I see something about catching a hard to catch horse I watch or read it. Seriously. I am on the HUNT for a way to catch my hard to catch mare. Here’s the big things I’ve always heard and have tried and what I’ve moved to recently.

Make them move their feet.

Basically, if your horse doesn’t come to you, or at least allow you to come to it, make them move their feet, and not slowly. The idea is that horses don’t like to work, so if you make them work, they will quickly become tired of working and stop and let you catch them.

This has worked and not worked for us. Yes, she will eventually get tired of running around and stop and let me catch her, but by then I am usually sweaty, tired and annoyed, as is she, and then the rest of the time we spend together doesn’t go well.

Match Steps and Create a Connection

In the last year or so I heard something new. Go out into the field and match steps with your horse. It takes a lot of concentration to match your horse’s steps. The idea is that your horse can see how much you are paying attention, and that you are very in the moment, that they connect with you and trust you.

This has not worked as well. I have walked and walked, matched steps for a long time, over and over, and yes, she will turn into me, but when I get up to her she will walk away.

I’m sure the people that are followers of this method would tell me she is just not ready to be with me, or doesn’t trust me enough, and I can see that. But I have done this with her for almost a year now, and honestly, I’m over it. I want to do some work with my horse.

FEED THEM

This one comes up, but seems to be frowned upon in most of the horse community. So when I recently saw a new “how to catch a hard to catch horse” video in Michael Gascon’s membership site I watched it immediately. One of the first things he said, was rattle a bucket of food.

I haven’t really done this much, but I have had treats in my pocket and once I get the halter on I have given her a treat. It works as long as I have treats. But when I stop bringing treats, the smart girl… stops coming. πŸ™‚

Liberty

He also said in that video, the BEST thing you can do to catch a hard to catch horse is to teach it liberty.

Interesting.

His thought behind it is this: liberty is all about the draw. Drawing your horse in to you, getting them to come to you, follow you, listen to you without being on a lead. If you can teach them that you can pretty much draw them into you anywhere… and what exactly is catching your horse? Yep. Drawing them into you.

So… Goose and I have started doing a little liberty work.

Michael also has a fantastic series on starting liberty in his membership site. I love how he has learned from a bunch of people, and has pulled things together in the most simple of terms and broken it down into simple steps that anyone can follow.

I’ve literally had the book The Art of Liberty Training for Horses sitting next to my bed for months now. It is a beautiful book. I’ve read part of it, but have not been able to figure out how to put one thing into practice yet. But after watching the first video in Team MG I went out and we worked on it.

Today was Goose’s second liberty session. We have moved up to having the rope around her neck, but me not holding the other end. I think we are doing pretty darn good!

I used some of what we had worked on in our first lesson while trying to catch her to get her to the round pen. It worked pretty well. It only took me a few minutes to catch her today. I also used some positive reinforcement for her as well, which seemed to help with her motivation.

What I’ve found in horse training is there are many ways to do anything, and everything. The big thing is finding something that works for you. Whether it’s a method to catch a hard to catch horse, or just the mindset you have around training your horse, find what works for you, and don’t give up. There are so many trainers out there… one will be a perfect match for you and your horse!

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