Training Tip: Hold the Soft Feel Longer

0607_Tip

Vertical flexion with your horse is something that you’ll build on with each give. First the horse has to understand that when you pick up on the reins and apply pressure with your legs he needs to maintain whatever gait he’s in and give to the pressure. As soon as he understands that concept, then you can ask him to hold the soft feel longer. This “Hot Potato Give” will turn into holding vertical flexion for a stride. One stride will turn into two and before long, two will turn into 20. The key is not to get greedy and ask the horse for too many strides at first.

When a horse starts doing well, our first instinct as predators is to ask for more. But the trick to training horses is when it feels good, quit – instantly give back to the horse. It usually takes a few days for a horse to get consistently good at the Hot Potato Give at whatever gait you’re working on. Then you can move on to holding the soft feel longer. If you start holding it longer and the horse gets worse, he’s telling you that he’s not ready for it, and he needs to get better at the Hot Potato Give before progressing.

Have a horsemanship question or looking for more training tips? Check out the No Worries Club.

More News

Back to all news

See All
FILES2f20152f112f1013_07.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Kudos for Method Ambassador Miranda Stalnaker

I am a No Worries Club member and saw Miranda in the newsletter as a graduate from your Ambassador program….

Read More
1115_03

10 years ago

Meet Method Ambassador Shaley Jackson

From the start of her horsemanship journey, Method Ambassador Shaley Jackson ran barrels, at first locally and then on a…

Read More
0318_Tip

1 year ago

Training Tip: Pushy Mustang Won’t Roundpen

Question: I have a 3-year-old mustang mare, and I’ve always had problems with her pushing her chest into stall doors,…

Read More
0418_Tip

9 years ago

Training Tip: Work on Individual Maneuvers to Avoid Anticipation

If you show your horse in an event with patterns, like reining or dressage, don’t practice the pattern from start…

Read More