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Imagine the following: your horse has stepped on his lead, or set back against a tie. In the past he would have felt trapped by the pressure and pulled harder, but after youve taken him through the head lowering lesson on this tape, hell understand that theres another option.Now hell yield to the pressure and drop his head. Instead of having a wreck, hell know how to put the slack back into the lead.
Or maybe your horse is the one that rears when he gets excited. On the ground or under saddle his response to pressure is to stand up on his hind legs. With this lesson, youll show him alternatives to these theatrics that will make him much safer to be around.
Or suppose youve taken your horse to the county fair. Your friends horse is going crazy, leaping and rearing up. But youve taught your horse the demand cue to calm down. Youve given him a way to handle his fear.
This lesson teaches your horse patience. It shows you how to build duration with the clicker. If youve experimented with clicker training, youve probably discovered how eager horses become to show off behaviors theyve learned. That can be great fun at first, but it may not feel very stable. Your horse may feel like an equine yo yo, offering the same bits of behavior over and over again to earn reinforcement. This tape shows you how to combine the clicker with pressure and release of pressure to build duration into the head-lowering behavior. In the process your horse will be learning patience. Hell learn that if he wants to earn reinforcement, he has to control his fidgety, fussy, push-into-you, run-for-the-next-county desires. Instead he has to stand quietly waiting for you to click.
Head-lowering teaches emotional control, and it also teaches physical balance. If your goal is up-level performance, the head lowering exercise is an important foundation skill. Why? Because this head-lowering exercise teaches your horse how to shift his weight back into his hindquarters and to stretch through the entire length of his spine. If your horse leans down onto his shoulders, or over-flexes laterally, this exercise will teach him how to get up off his shoulders and elevate the base of his neck. The more you ask your horse to collect, the more you also need to be able to ask him to stretch down through his whole spine.
The video features four horses:
Leyden, a four year old Dutch warmblood gelding who knows hes big and knows how to use his shoulder weight to barge through his owner. Leydens behavior is typical of many youngsters. He illustrates well all the steps horses gothrough as they learn the head lowering lesson.
Sindri, the six year old Icelandic stallion featured in Lesson 2. Sindri shows you how to take the head-lowering lesson beyond basics to develop soft, light control.
Gregor, a twelve year old approved Dutch warmblood stallion. Gregor was bred to be an Olympic-level performer, but his original trainers used too much force with him. he became instead an aggressive, dangerous, come-at-you-with-his-teeth horse. On the tape youll see how his present owner takes him through the head lowering lessons to a place of calmness where he can learn to trust people.
Blitz, a six year old quarter horse. Blitz is a good-natured, easy going horse. His issue isnt fear, so much as it is balance. Under saddle Blitz is stiff and above the bit. The head-lowering exercise teaches his teenage owner how to be rounder and more forward in his gaits. Blitzs lesson show you how to take the ground exercises and connect them to riding.
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