A bolting Percheron at a clinic
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- Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
- This is a clip from a clinic in Australia of a Percheron X that had a bolting issue. After getting things sorted out on the first day of the clinic, the bolt is non existent. UPDATE MAY 2015 owner says horse is going very well, posted a new video of a very relaxed horse loping around.
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That is one of the best cowboy trainers I have ever seen. Calm, quite, balanced. He's like, there is nothing wrong with your horse. Just stay out of his way let him stretch At The Walk First until his back is in use and he balances himself. Then ease the trot staying quiet and let him again find his balance and his back. Then oh look what? what? Easy canter. Well done. hope the owner got a few more clinics in with you over a year's time and went home with homework to do.
annette fournier if he is a good cowboy, why is he in a English saddle
Enza Olivieri a good cowboy can ride in any saddle. his leg position is great. I rode dressage but enjoyed training in a Western saddle.lol. for flat riding it really doesn't matter what saddle you are in if you have a good seat.😉
Crazy Princess
Once you realize that you don't need reins, and that everything can be done just with balance and leg pressure, your horse will become the most relaxed animal in existence. And then it will start accepting reins and bits as well as a form of closer communication and not some type of constriction and pain. Soft hands - gentle horse.
This horse probably doesn't enjoy being ridden. Notice how he stretches his head way forward and down to drag the reins from the rider's hands? I've seen many horses, and especially children's ponies, do this and then run away or rub the rider off under branches on trails. Horses learn this method of controlling the rider very quickly with the inexperienced.
If you look through Warwicks videos he wants the horses to lower their heads on their own accord, as that is a sign of a horse being relaxed, so he will let the reins slide through (you can especially notice this way of thinking of his the last couple of years) - and he also wants to teach them that no one will be touching that bit, messing with their head and mouth as that is something people most likely have done previously, that taught the horse the bits and reins are something uncomfortable/painful. And as with green horses making sure they get get comfortable with it and stays sensitive and super responsive. Then he works on teaching the horse a new relationship to these tools, teach it that a soft hand on the reins is something you can follow, not something you need to fight against.
That's not what this video is about though. It's about sorting out the tension and anxiety step by step so the horse can find relaxation even when the element of speed is added.
He never picked up on both reins, but he did pick up on one rein to put a bend into the horse's body and help him come back to being relaxed.
BubblyPersonality11 that’s my plan with the horse I am just starting to get on.
@@Telindra yes exactly the head being held low means his hind legs are under him and the back is not hollow. The person who wrote about the head being low and stretched out knows little about the mechanics and physiology of horses.
Beautiful! Was nervously waiting for him to bolt while you were sitting on him. So glad he did not! I would love to ride my horse with a loose rein like that the entire ride!
LOVE Warwick! Good horseman!
BlueBlazesWildcat 9o9
Hi
BlueBlazesWildcat j8
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A real joy to watch
Wow, this vid shows a great horseman riding. Beautiful. Horse relaxed and comfortable.
Y'all thought Warwick would let a horse bolt??? xD
Thinking the same thing haha.
That horse looks so nice!
Always awesome, Warwick!
You do us Aussies proud!!!!!
Hell, he does aspiring horsemen world wide proud.
Your right he do"s!!!!
I dont know Warwick personally but I can understand why he doesnt put all the steps he goes through with horses with issues because every horse and every issue requires a combination of many different things depending on the response that the trainer is getting. He also wouldn't want all of you supposedly intelligent horse people to sit at your computer screen, watch a video , which is impossible to transfer the feel and touch that is required, and then say oh, I tried what Warwick did and he is a fake cause my horse didn't respond or it didn't work for me. He possibly hangs onto the front of your competition dressage saddle so as to enable himself to transmit smooth, consistent signals to the horse to get a desired response. Learn to train your self and your horse and use the competition saddle for the competitions.
Get out of your computer rooms and out and go ask these guys to help show you how to make yourself a better horse person and stop criticizing. When you can do it consistently with all types of horses you will find that you are still learning! Well done Warwick, Keep up the good work on the impossible task of educating horse people that in reality have no idea or desire to better themselves for the horses sake and there safety.
Jimi Jones The session , from memory, takes 53 minutes. when I put it up, RUclips allowed me 10 minute videos. Would you rather see the first 10 minutes and complain "he didn't get anything done," the last 10 minutes," he didn't show me how to do it", or what I put up, which shows you the steps ?
Perfect !
I really hate it when people "label" horses because of their own mistakes, eg biter, kicker,etc.... this is a fabulous demonstration of a 'bolter'..well done mate!!..sadly, more often than not horses end up at doggers cause the owner made the original mistake and blamed it on the horse
I'd love to see him in person - better yet, I'd like to take my horse to him.
you need to command a animal while giving it respect, this can be applied to any animal, dogs, cats, cattle, horses, birds. if they are commanded to do something and are trained to respect those commands, you can get them to do anything in a short time. they need to trust your commands and you need to put your foot down to any resistance to those commands. this man knows what he's doing, he could arguably work out any animal in under an hour.
Fantastic!
I love this :D
Nice work
what a nice horse (: not an awkward looking cross breed
where was the percheron and the horse bolting ?
Bill for starters I wouldn't be making comments about a guy whose name you can't spell or pronounce.... and when you are making them about a guy who has many followers and you tube hits who look at your comments and think one word "moron" seriously dude. check out the rest of his videos we all know something you don't. and that there is a process this horse was also referred to by the owner as a bolting Percheron. so stop watching pretty pictures and listen to the video.... also helps if you subscribe where footage is full length not just snips sounds like you could use a subscription if your life and horsemanship is at such low that the only thing you can do is be unprofessional and down another trainer.... oh and WARWICK how amazing are you that the only thing this dude can pick on is your title choice for a video.... :) Lisa Ynot and Soleil honor you...
Omg he didn't bolt during the clinic, anticlimactic
+Brandon Yuan Yup, good horse training is boring, poor horse training is exciting.
+WarwickSchiller no the thing is I thought the horse was going to spook during the clinic
WarwickSchiller Ha! so very true!!
Ub
Brandy History the horse was there for his bolting at a loose rein so he could get help
Funny, at the barn I ride at, the horses are being ridden english style, and every single time they bolt, the teacher goes; "Oh, that's because you didn't keep your reins tight enough."
Riiiight... More like 'cause the reins were kept WAAAAY too tight! XD
Way too many "instructors" around putting riders off to a bad start. Sad really. Eventually some of these riders decide to find an easier, and correct, way. The others often quit when the disenchantment hits them. Also sad.
you shouldnt have to is the point of this video. you can see the horse in the video looking for the connection to the bit and not having one. that ma be why he bolted before. bt you shouldnt have to hold your reins super tight. my mare will do anything collected up without bolting and m reins arent tight. just barely connected.
TrespassGirl You need to find another riding school before you get seriously hurt from a bolting horse. Your riding instructor is stealing your valuable money if thats the best explanation they can give. Google stacey westfall and look at how tight her reins are on her bolting horse. She doesnt have reins!
some of your video titles are a bit misleading.I thought I was going to see you on the ground and the horse going around the arena at a fast gallop.Great training video though.....thanks
He titles his videos after the particular problems the horse has when he gets it. This is a horse that came to him for bolting... there for ... he calls the horse ... the bolting percheron ...
Great!!!
loved this video but it is mistitled as the horse doesn't bolt at all.
Seems to me the owner was scared of this horse's huge stride -- I know I would be! -- and Warwick wasn't. He let the horse roll at its natural pace.
First off... clean ur freaking saddle so it doesn't squeak all over the place. Poor warwick. Second how can you attempt to do dressage on a horse you can't loosen ur reins on? I guess stretching down to the contact was not homework they were working on at home. I love this guy. I've developed a bunch of hunter/jumper event horses, and for all those saying English and western and blah blah disciplines are very different that's crap. All the fundamentals are the same.
As to cleaning (his) saddle?! It wasn't his saddle, it belonged to the horses owner who was at the clinic for help with her horse.
Carol Ley known. The owner should keep tack in good repair.
I agree with you. If you're going to use a piece of tack, keep it in good condition. Could even be dangerous otherwise.
Carol Ley my english saddle squeaks, but its clean every single week. Its not that the saddle needs cleaned. It is just showing that the saddle is very used. All of mine are old english saddles that are still in perfect condition.
Baby powder fixes the squeak.
I have so many questions as to why English riders don’t ride on a lose rein? Why do they Alwyas have that “contact” which is really a constant pulling on the bit and causes the horses mouth to open and foam. Why the heck do they do that? Why are they unable to ride on a lose rein like this? Clearly Warwick is riding in an English saddle and bridle, but he doesn’t need that “contact” and nobody else does either.
Do they do it to “hold the horses head”?? Bc horses can hold their own head preferctly when they run themselevs and when they’re ridden western, they aren’t stupid. And this video is a perfect example of that. So I am genuinely curious as to why “constant contact on the reins” (constant pulling on the bit) is a thing
Olive Shupe The majority of us warmup on a loose rein. A properly trained horse is started with a horse in loose rein so they learn to carry themselves and that the bit isn’t going to be painful and uncomfortable. The goal with an educated English rider would be to let the horse create contact for them by accepting the bit and working into it. English riders who don’t know what they’re doing will grab a horses face and “hold them” like you said, which isn’t necessary. Throughout the ride a lot of us phase through loose and stretchy rein to tighter contact and more collection. What you might be seeing is well meaning but incorrect dressage-y stuff where riders are trying to get their horse over their back and forward into the bit. As an English rider I think it’s terrible this horse hasn’t been ridden on a loose rein, it seems like someone skipped a huge step in its training.
T. Haskett I’ve ridden English twice and the one time I did on a friesan i was supposed to have heavy contact on the reins... (where the reins look like a straight line, in my opinion they shouldn’t) and I had to do this to keep the horses head from snaking to the ground which is wrong and she clearly only does that because she was taught it and is now reliant on tight contact when she probably wasn’t before.
You never see western horses doing that because they’re always on lose rein. It’s like as soon as an English rider loses contact on the reins, the horse immediately lowers its head, and sometimes they lower it too low to where they’re snaking, you never see that in western. I just don’t get it, horses are most comfortable on a lose rein. If a horse is constantly being pulled with the bit, that’s like constant pressure and will desensitize the horse to light pressure because they’re used to hard.
It just defeats the whole principle of applying pressure when they do the wrong thing and releasing pressure when they give the right answer, bc when you pull on the reins constantly that’s constant pressure. Sometimes I think it’s just because english riders like that arched neck in a horse, whcih isn’t comfortable or natural.
T. Haskett no disrespect by the way, I’m just super confused as to why it’s even a thing and I want to know the mentality or reason behind doing it. I don’t think reins should ever look like they’re a straight line I don’t see how that’s comfortable, it’s like the horse gets a relief as soon as the reins are left to sit
Any tips on how to stop a bolting pony I am crunnently in the process of brining on a 13.2welsh I'm 11 so not that good he is fine in the school and small fields he just bolts when we go into a big field plz someone help me
jumping_oxers_xo xoxo This shouldn't be your responsibility as an 11 year old. Tell your parents. Why would they let you ride a horse like this in an open field?
zubery I wrote this like ages ago. I am pretty sure it's not your place to worry :) dw he is fine now
+equii kay lol I wish someone had answered ur question, since that is my kid's horse's problem now that I am working on. Only bolts out in the open. She usually doesn't get to bolt far, since we do a disengage.
What does bolting mean?
horses r cleverer than we think. he s figured out rider not anxious.
I can't even trot with my reins to the buckle more or less canter. I mean, I trust my horse, but not THAT much.
both^^
I would've liked to see more of the process, this isn't really educational as it is...
I don't think the title says "this is an educational video".
But, there is a lot of education in if you listen. I had to make many corrections at the walk, quite a few at the trot, and very few at the canter. That's because I fixed the issues at the slower speeds.
WarwickSchiller I wasn't really saying the video was bad as it is, I just mean that perhaps people would've gotten more out of it if more of the training process was shown, even if it was only bits from here and there. It is great as it is, but it could have been more too!
The whole session goes for 53 minutes, and as RUclips statistics tells me the average person views only 5 minutes of video, I thought it most important to show the process, including the end, rather than the first 5 minutes.
WarwickSchiller I can respect that reasoning. Do you perhaps have the whole session on a different site? I would love to see the whole thing, it looks very fascinating.
I have over 200 hours of real time training footage, on my website. This full session is just one of them.Just google search my name.
This Percheron is mixed with a thourobred
No bolting..
Yes, thats the point.
The horse looks sedated to me.
He wasnt, believe me.
Just relaxed:) You have the touch.
Change the name of this stupid clip. Its a lie
AS far as I was told when I mounted him, he was a bolting Percheron..
Love the Squeeky saddle :)
Sounds like a wintec
That's what baby powder is for. Cheap and effective/turn your saddle upside down and use Lots!
The results horsetrainers get for their clients should speak for themselves. The arguements here seem to be about misrepresentation or ambiguity of title. Those viewers who are not familiar with Warwick Schiller's method's would need to view more as the URL at the end directs. Perhaps Bill, you would prefer if Warwick puts inverted commas into titles, indicating that this is a title given to describe the horse and the problem as advised by the owner. My mare HAD a problem with rearing until I worked with Andrew McLean to address the issue. I would still call her a 'rearer' even though she hasn't since. I described her to Andrew as 'a rearer'. When I worked with Andrew for two one hour sessions, from the ground to the saddle, she didn't rear once. She went to about seven times when the pressure was on but she never fully reared and hasn't since If I had filmed the session and posted it here I probably would have titled it "My rearing mare at an Andrew McLean clinic", without any intention to mislead but because the subject, for me, was always 'the rear'. (I cannot enter into a debate on grammar or semantics, so I won't. Others have done a better job than I ever could).
Anyway, the results Warwick Schiller gets, seen first hand by many, speak for themselves and I don't think he needs to be concerned that you don't like his youTube titles.
Wonderful work and completely right every gait has to be perfected if you want just one to be right. My trotter bolts uncontrollably and was taught that the more contact you had, the faster they should go as he was raced in harness. I used natural horsemanship to retrain him without contact, starting from the ground up and now he works in a rope halter without contact and I can take him out on the roads in one or onto a gallop track and stop him with just my voice!
It clearly states at the beginning of this video that the current owner of this horse saw the previous owner ride this Percheron and it bolted with them through a fence, hence why the video is called a bolting Percheron as it has never been ridden on a loose rein since for fear of it bolting !! It would be extremely dangerous and unprofessional for any trainer to allow or encourage a horse to bolt for the sake of a video and to expect that is ridiculous. The video is to show that with the correct training and handling the horse should not want to bolt even with a loose rein. Excellent horsemanship I say
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I never blame the horse, i blame the rider. Usually me, but others too. I never thought I was great rider til trail boss put me on charge of ride. But i was on great horses.
Just make it easy for the horse to understand the answer.. I see so many people blaming horses, because they expect the horse to understand them, without giving clear directions on what they are asking for.
So the horse is so confused and the more confused it becomes, the more adrenaline will build up, until it panicks..
We can all be pushed to that point when we just say fuck it, I am out of here.. Looking for that moment we can bolt...
That horse has very bouncy gaits, but I'm really impressed with the guy that was working with him. I certainly couldn't do any of that on a loose rein.
Meg Wallace . The horse is using his back end and flexes his hocks thus it will look like it is bouncy.
My Arabian has a very bouncy trot. I can sit to it without a problem I just have to make sure she is relaxed before I do a sitting trot. I work on softening a lot and lateral work and circles and yes I can do this on a very loose rein and she will keep the same frame
Um why, you should be able to’
oh I was sitting on the edge of my seat waiting and waiting for it to bolt but I didn't :(
Wow, so nice. Love the blowing out snorting sounds. 2nd only to a good old link & a chew!
I've watched several of his video snippets and have to say he's the best horseman I've seen since Ray Hunt. The difference is his attitude towards people is much better than Ray's was.
wow thats great ,I think a lot of people have fear to ride with a loose rain I.Let my Horse the rain too get deep the people are look at me and think I am crazy . She is sometime with her nose on the ground when Im trotting her Back gets round its realy fun .I own her sinc 23 years (I get her with 6 months) she is my big love
As a training video, this has little value. Nothing was shown on the process of getting this horse to the point where he is safe and obedient, you just see the finished product, not the process. I find this true of many of Warwick's videos. I guess they are simply teasers so you will buy his full length videos, but still . . .
Yup, each of these youtube videos have a full length one for sale. They're super cheap compared to other trainers as well.
***** If you are a rider, then you already KNOW that most things are possible with proper training. It's how you get there that most of us are interested in seeing.
Sue Smith
Without these shorter clips showing that his methods are amazing and effective, you might not have the motivation to get the subscription to Warwicks other videos... They are worth FAR more than the monthly fee. Truly life changing!
Somehow I don't think you would learn if you watched 100 videos if you didn't learn from this one. So easy to learn from this talented teacher.
Bill Baehr -------- Regarding your comment... -- "Ok, It should have been titled,"A Percheron that was a bolter at a clinic." This leads someone to believe that the Percheron bolted at a clinic before and is now being ridden by Warwick to correct the issues, during one of his clinic sessions. The video was very good. But, yet, because you are so unhappy with the title, you have to continue complaining about it over and over!! YOU, Mr. Baehr is nothing but a trouble-maker/bully. If you are so unhappy with the professionalism of presentation and expertise of Mr. Warwick Schiller, then stop watching his videos. Plain & simple.. Go find someone else to badger!! Continuing this argument over a title, [that only YOU FIND MISLEADING], you are just aggravating no one but yourself and making yourself look like a fool! Since you won't call Mr. Schiller to discuss how he "lied", on his video title, just proves that are also a cyber-bully hiding behind your monitor screen!!!!!
you are absolutely amazing Warwick, I would love to do one of your clinics one day you are a great horseman, inspiration to the rest of us for sure!
beautiful work
Excellent work. He makes you look small. Lol.
The saddle is just as squeaky as the price of gum I am chewing! Haha! 😄
Cool, but gotta admit he sees he's indoors, knows he's got nowhere to bolt to. Perfect place for training a bolter.
Warwick's amazing!
I have a horse who also could not be ridden with a loose rein when I first got him. I have retrained him, and now he can . . . But I had to figure it out on my own, no help. Great demo
You couldn't hear me applauding when you held that canter - great work!
U know that is either a very well maintained saddle or it's brand spanking new lolol those squeaks are intense XD
I wish my mare would keep up a canter for that long without stopping!
Hehe, I was waiting for you to change directions and ask for a flying change and then get this nice relaxed change.
the horse didn't bolt
I really don’t think he rides very well. Looks very unaccomplished as if he’s overweight and sluggish. Poor horse. 😐 sorry. I mean the rider not the horse.
Yesss. Bouncing around in canter like beginner, I don't know why people look up to this guy
ok, WHY is this guy hanging on to the front of the saddle as the horse goes into canter? He has only demonstrated that he can ride the horse of whoever brought him into the clinic. What has the horse owner learned here to prevent his or her problem? Not much, I'd say.
You watched me ride a horse on a loose rein at canter, that has never been cantered on a loose rein and tends to bolt, and all you saw was me holding onto the saddle?
Well Im glad you got some entertainment from it.
May you be happy.
that did not help at all. where was the bolting?
***** Im not happy or sad about it. Just stumbeled across this. Very nice.
Fantastic Warwick, it was awesome to see that! Smile for the camera Sharene!
Probably the horse just doesn't feel safe with the owner/girl on his back. If SHE's nervous, maybe because he's 16hands and she feels high up......maybe she ought to go someplace and have lessons ON a tall horse. Get over the height issue. THEN take lessons on this horse. There's a reason a horse acts like that.....she must be a nervous rider?? If she's "Anticipating" something bad......he's already picking up on that. Just relax, like he did and show the horse it's ok if you're 16hands, be relaxed with it and HE will be more relaxed having her on his back. They FEEL your tension when you're on them. This video would have been better if he gave HER a lesson after he rode the horse. Then he could SEE the problem and correct it right there. Help her bond with the horse. Get HER relaxed. He's a good one for her to take lessons with.
Looks like the clinics are going great!!!!
Very nice Warwick, I enjoyed this short clip ;)
That’s not bolting, that’s just cantering!!!!
Thats the whole point. They said this horse will bolt if ridden on a loose rein, and I got him to where he didnt.
Click bait! He didn’t even bolt, and that’s not even a Percheron!!! Your way off in the breed.
If the owner tells me its a Percheron, its a percheron. I didnt question her.
WarwickSchiller that owner is misinformed, that is certainly not a percheron. I hope you would know that.
Wish I was that good.
this is brilliant. I started doing this will my thoroughbred when he was recovering from injury and really works wonders!
I like you more today (2020), but you were ever near the horse. Now you've got it :)
how can you teach clinics while posting on the incorrect diagonal....
that made me cringe
That’s all you saw?
Perspective is a funny thing. I have talked about you a lot.
I tell the story of me making a video of me walking , trotting and cantering on a loose rein on a horse that previously would bolt if cantered on a loose , and people making the comment “wrong diagonal “
About that time the crowd groans and do the facepalm motion.
That wasn't even a gallop; what do you think a bolt is?
The horse didnt bolt. Before I got on him they told me if you try to canter on a loose rein he bolts.
Wow!
I agree with tshorse; this horse just looks like a grey quarter horse to me, the only thing "Perchie" is the color, no size, no dappling, no big head or feet.
This horse looks like a typical perch cross to me, I'm not sure what you're expecting. If you image search percheron cross, very similar looking horses come up. I own a definite perch cross who has healthy feet, so not flared or gigantic looking and people often think they are 'small'. As for size, they come in a wide range, because it IS a cross. My gelding looks very similar to this guy, only a bit rounder body, and longer face.
So you are clever enough to see genetics? You should patent that and go into forensics!
Liz Nitz So Im doing a clinic. The owner tells me its a Percheron cross. I take her word for it. Do all of you guys think I should have argued with her and said you are a liar, its not a percheron cross ?
WarwickSchiller NO! People like to split hairs. It's a great video.
Brilliant!
clickbait..
would a french link full cheek snaffle bit be ok to use for retraining a bolting horse?
Thanks for this vid. I have a very green mare prone to bolting. I bought the whole video from your website. After watching tons of other trainers vids & going to several clinics by top trainers, it was your video that convinced me to not give up on her. You are a great teacher. You make it so simple to understand each step. SO big thanks from me & my girl!
Self Confidence in the rider, in my opinion, makes the more confident it’s safe.
so it get my horses posture better should i start correcting her on the ground?
That is NOT a Percheron.
If Im giving a clinic, and the owner of the horse tells me its a percheron, then when I post the video on RUclips, I say its a percheron. Did you want me to argue with her ?
Did he every try to bolt? I really wish you would come to Texas to do a clinic, my mare could really use some help.
I have the opposite problem with my horse fine on a long rein not so happy with contact and asking for collection
Hey I live near Gatton and I know exactly where he is!
Beautiful horse! Seriously, an abslute beaut!
great video.. he looks very relaxed, did they change the bit from what they were using, or was it the same bit..
he's not using the bit so it really doesn't matter
horse has a loose ring snaffle in his mouth.. as far as i remember the a bit.. duh
why did you say a bolting horse at a clinic when the horse didnt bolt?
I said "a bolting percheron", at a clinic. He bolts if you canter him on a loose rein, or so the owner said, and he was at a clinic.
ohh ok thank you
***** When I got on him, the lady said he ALWAYS bolts on a loose rein, so as far as I knew , he bolts. He didnt, because I worked on all the little things that cause the usual bolting.
I think you showed how to fix the problem. These idiot kids think we need to crash the car as a demo to teach them how not to crash... sad
omg he did no bolt
+conkerandminni eb Thats correct, otherwise the title would have been A percheron bolting at a clinic
Probably wouldn't be inclined to bolt as much/if at all if he were bitless.
pretty sure it doesn't work that way
Horses often are problematic when on the bit because the bit HURTS. Take away the bit and any other pain-based methods of control/managing them and you remove a lot of the problems. However, that said, there's numerous variables to why a horse might bolt. Maybe he/she's had a bad day/night and is cranky/irritable. Maybe the horse doesn't like the rider? Maybe he wants to be with his other horse buddies. Hard to say.
TaraLynn Gray removing the bit isn't always the answer tho. not every horse can be ridden bites just like that. it can actually be dangerous to just from one day to the other ride bites without any training before hand. a horse has to re learn the cues (turning and stopping) especially on problem horses, who bolt, buck etc.
groundwork is the answer to most problems, not the bit. the bit doesn't hurt a horse when its resting in its mouth and tho i don't like bits, a rubber bit or a snaffle will not be painful for the horse if used correctly.
i find it that bolting problems are not because of what it has in its mouth or whats on its nose. rearing and bucking problems can be because of the bit tho.
Bits don't hurt if you know how to use them. Bitless riding can also be very painful and can break the nose bone of the horse if the nose piece is placed low.
guaranteed it doesn't work that way
why state in the headline a percheron, when it's not,
Because the lady who owned it, told me it was a percheron cross. Did you want me to argue with her ?
No but you know what a true percheron looks like, they pull enough beer drays. I had this mental picture of the horse bolting. and when I saw it was a cross I was disappointed. In London they still use shires to pull the drays within a 1 mile radius because they are cheaper than lorries
Im unsure as to why you would be disappointed in the breed of the horse. The video is about educating people to get along with their horse better, not about education of what a certain breed looks like.
I'm just wondering why people think a draft horse (either part or any fraction of) would 'fit in' a dressage or English class. I guess to each his own? But you don't put huge dogs in a toy breed competition. Nice looking horse. Rough gaits. Nice job as usual Mr.Schiller.
What a big ol’ sweet baby
So impressive.
Its tired - Pension and bye a stronger horse that can tell - you hes mood
Can you repeat that in English so the rest of us can understand.
Pity we only saw the results of the training, rather then the entire training!
If you want to watch the whole thing he has more videos on his subscription channel. Or you could watch these videos that deal with a similar issue, and he treated the same way. ruclips.net/video/-p9EAKbSUUc/видео.html and ruclips.net/video/4RzOOWr8Dyc/видео.html ruclips.net/video/6TxGI3pYRmU/видео.html and ruclips.net/video/_WPhkAq2nIA/видео.html
That True Grit reference lol
And please come to the Netherlands!!
oh boy your english
i am not sure this is a pure-bred Percheron, maybe a mix?
Button Quail Girl He said at the beginning it's a mix