Training Tip: Hands That Release Quickly Make a Soft Horse

0502_Tip

When it comes to horsemanship, you’ve probably heard the saying, “Light hands, light mouth.” The person sharing the adage is under the impression that as long as your hands stay light and gentle on the reins, your horse will be soft and supple in return.

My years of experience training a wide variety of horses tell me that’s just not true. Instead, I’d say, “Light hands that pick up softly and hands that release quickly make a horse’s mouth light.” For example, you could pick up gently on the reins and be very light, but if your horse roots against that pressure and flips his nose out or pulls on the reins, if you don’t make him feel uncomfortable by increasing the pressure on the reins (or in some way make him feel uncomfortable for the behavior), you’re going to be teaching him that pulling against the bit is acceptable because there’s no consequence for it. If you let the horse lean on the bit, he will remain heavy and stiff, and it will be difficult to progress his training.

On the other hand, if you pick up on the reins and make contact and don’t release back to the horse when he softens and gives, your horse won’t get soft, either. Releasing pressure is the horse’s reward for doing the right thing. Knowing when to release pressure is when feel and timing come into play.

The bottom line is the quicker you release, the quicker the horse understands. Horses just want us to stop pulling on them. They dream about it out in the pasture and in their stalls. You can make it a reality for your horse by teaching him that as soon as he softens, he’ll get an instant release of pressure.

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

More News

Back to all news

See All
FILES2f20152f082f0901_04.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Mississippi Fundamentals Clinic

Do you want to feel safe when working with your horse and enjoy your time with him? Learn how to…

Read More
Phoenix_header_heart-attacks

6 years ago

Fundamentals With Phoenix: How to Train Your Human

Lesson 3: Heart Attacks Are Free, So Give Your Human One This week’s lesson builds off last week’s spooking tutorial,…

Read More
0306_05

8 years ago

Insulin Resistance

By Dr. Tania Cubitt, Ph.D. Equine Nutrition & Reproduction Standlee Premium Western Forage® What is it? Insulin resistance is a condition…

Read More
031026_Tip

3 months ago

Training Tip: Mare is Developing a Saddling Issue

Question: I have an 11-year-old Quarter Horse mare that I have not worked with due to two injuries since June….

Read More