Helping a buddy sour horse get over his buddies in less than 10 minutes!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 27 июл 2020
  • Get UNLIMITED ACCESS to exclusive videos, tips and tricks for beginners to advanced horse trainers in *West’s Online Horse Training Course - Science Based Horsemanship:
    cutt.ly/Horse_Training_Videos
    Now you can discover how to train your horse with natural horsemanship the easy way - using the power of science and the horse’s _natural brain chemistry_. When you work with the equine brain, you form lasting training relationships, making liberty and natural horse training easier, faster and safer for you and your horse.
    △_Get Hours Of Horse Training Videos + More Added Every Month_
    △_Learn Groundwork Exercises, Roundpen, Liberty Lessons And Much More_
    △_Unlock Your Horses Mind To Learn Faster And Easier_
    △_Restart And TuneUp Older Horses By Finding And Fixing Problem Areas_
    △_Start Colts And Young Horses With Natural Horsemanship - On Steroids_
    △ Works On All Horse Breeds - From Arabs To Quarter Horses, Appaloosas To Wild Mustangs
    *Get Your Subscription To West Taylor’s Science Based Horsemanship Today
    cutt.ly/Horse_Training_Videos
    WANT FREE CONTENT?
    We also have provide a *FREE Docuseries*, where we highlight a common horse training problem and post a *free training tip video*, which is available for one week. New videos are added every FRIDAY so be sure to subscribe to West’s Free Horse Training Docuseries here:
    cutt.ly/training_tips
    △ SUBSCRIBE: / outlawrides
    △ WEBSITE: westtaylor.net/
    △ FACEBOOK: / wildwestmustangranch
    △ INSTAGRAM: / wildwestmustangranch
    West Taylor is a renowned BLM Mustang Trainer, who has worked on a variety of major Wild horse film projects and worked with various veteran groups and special education programs using his unique approach to training wild horses to be calm, steady and reliable trail horses, working horses and equine therapy horses.
  • ЖивотныеЖивотные

Комментарии • 47

  • @BB-co7kp
    @BB-co7kp 2 года назад +9

    I want to cry over the frustration of my severely buddy sour horse. This vid made me happy and laugh. Thank you

    • @OutlawRides
      @OutlawRides  2 года назад +1

      Buddy sour horses can be a real BIG issue! Glad you like this approach!

  • @ltrocha
    @ltrocha 2 года назад +12

    Finally a horse trainer using COMMON SENSE to solve the buddy sour problem. I've seen so many others try to BRIBE a horse out this and it never works. My hat is off to you West for telling people the truth. BTW, the girl demonstrated excellent timing.

    • @OutlawRides
      @OutlawRides  2 года назад +1

      Thanks Larry!

    • @10mileroadie
      @10mileroadie Год назад +1

      Larry, I have followed you many years! I used this technique with the gaited horse i purchased last fall. I don't have a good place to work. I also don't have anyone to ride with me, and there are many spook worthy situations that can arise. I was devastated that I couldn't take her out, hating myself for how tightly i had to hold her reins, and terrified she would fly home, pounding on the pavement or crashing through the crops, THIS WORKED!!!!!!! The secret is the loose rein.
      Reply

    • @ltrocha
      @ltrocha Год назад

      @@10mileroadie 👍

  • @10mileroadie
    @10mileroadie Год назад +2

    West, I used this technique with the gaited horse i purchased last fall. I also don't have anyone to ride with me, and there are many spook worthy situations that can arise. I was devastated that I couldn't take her out, hating myself for how tightly i had to hold her reins, and terrified she would fly home, pounding on the pavement or crashing through the crops, THIS WORKED!!!!!!! The secret is the loose rein. Thank you, thank you, thank you!!!

  • @gchristiansenUT
    @gchristiansenUT 2 месяца назад

    Just another example of making the wrong thing difficult and the right thing easy. I think it was either Ray Hunt or one of the Dorrance brothers that coined that phrase.

  • @Allisonloosemore
    @Allisonloosemore 3 года назад +8

    Make the right thing easy and the wrong thing hard principle right here 🤓

  • @SelectiveCleaningDisorder
    @SelectiveCleaningDisorder 11 месяцев назад

    I tried this today, and it worked so well! My buddy sour gelding is 16hh, and out-muscling him to go where I want him to is absolutely not an option. Thanks for the great video :)

  • @rayalencovsky1386
    @rayalencovsky1386 Год назад +1

    Absolutely brilliant, and superb! Made me grin!

  • @kblank9393
    @kblank9393 6 месяцев назад

    I've seen this principle done a few times, never quite this way. Easy!

  • @jennifercanfield6271
    @jennifercanfield6271 11 месяцев назад

    Well done! I've seen quite a few but this one really went so much better than the others.

  • @bethdondunlap4379
    @bethdondunlap4379 2 года назад +6

    Please no background music

    • @KMF3
      @KMF3 Год назад

      I agree 💯

  • @melodyblanchard2017
    @melodyblanchard2017 7 месяцев назад

    great idea

  • @jlf1309
    @jlf1309 Год назад +1

    FANTASTIC! Pretty much all about pressure and release. What an excellent demonstration! 👍😊

  • @TheArtsyMomma
    @TheArtsyMomma 3 года назад +1

    Good job Mandi!

  • @b.e.1023
    @b.e.1023 3 года назад +1

    Thank you very much... this is great..

  • @barbarawilson5719
    @barbarawilson5719 8 месяцев назад

    So good and usable! Can we also talk about the science of the knotted nose band on the horses left nostril? Just an observation and not met to take away from the lesson but as horse people we are ALWAYS learning and seeking knowledge!

    • @caitlinw8351
      @caitlinw8351 3 месяца назад

      the knots are placed on pressure points of the horses face (nerve clusters) so they hurt more and the horse is more sensitive/responsive to the feeling

  • @sseeback6754
    @sseeback6754 2 года назад

    Awesome!

  • @honeypie2555
    @honeypie2555 2 года назад +4

    Beware, buddy sour horses will buck you off if you try to separate them. I found out the hard way. I'm selling my buddy sour horse after getting bucked off and breaking my ankle. At my elderly age, that's the last thing I need.

    • @sassy6292
      @sassy6292 8 месяцев назад +1

      You are not wrong about that!

  • @KMF3
    @KMF3 Год назад

    What if you can't get the other people you are riding with to cooperate with this? 😢

  • @greykun
    @greykun 3 года назад +1

    This is perfect, both of my mares were buddy sour. One quickly realised that it's fine being on her own after few days of solo, but the warmblood mare is deeply attached to her friend. When I need to work with just one horse I have to tie her to a post so she can't hurt herself or destroy something. I'm amazed how quickly the horse in a video grasped the concept. I've tried patient pole and it gave almost zero results besides she is super calm while tied IF another horse is nearby. Hope your training video will help me fixing this behaviour.

    • @OutlawRides
      @OutlawRides  3 года назад +1

      Let me know how it goes! 👍🏻🤠

    • @greykun
      @greykun 2 года назад

      @@OutlawRides It worked well! But I've got new related problem with her, now she seems to associate my second horse with work and when we're getting too close she rears to move her away from us. Same thing on lead. She is too smart for her own good... It's like one or two episodes of rearing and all is fine after that. Do I just keep my calm until she learns the difference?

  • @seneynah
    @seneynah Год назад +2

    Works great on a lazier horse. Try that on Arabian they’ll trot all day long around buddies like they don’t even care…. I’m going to try the opposite use clicker food training away from the buddies. Mine is very food motivated.

    • @KMF3
      @KMF3 Год назад

      Good point. I have a half Arab

  • @ebonypegasus9864
    @ebonypegasus9864 2 года назад +1

    I'm the 100th like! yay. I can't do this til my horse is broke. he's a two year old and already showing signs of herd bound anxiety

    • @OutlawRides
      @OutlawRides  2 года назад +1

      Keep working with him now to build his confidence and connection with you👍🏻

  • @markmahnken6409
    @markmahnken6409 Год назад

    That's interesting but I think some horses will try and buck you off. Get ready to possibly ride a bronc. Good idea but I'm not sure it will work on every horse.

  • @daddyrabbit835
    @daddyrabbit835 3 года назад +2

    So what happens when you want to go riding with the other horses again?

    • @OutlawRides
      @OutlawRides  3 года назад +4

      I would suggest ride with your friends for 15 minutes, then ride away from your friends for several minutes. The idea is that your horse feels safe being alone with you. The hardest part is breaking the neuro chemical bond between horses. Once you can ween your horse away from others it becomes easier each time..

  • @amandanuss2943
    @amandanuss2943 3 года назад +1

    Do you have any advice on what to do when both your horses freak out when they aren’t near each other? My two horses have never had to be apart and they cant even be 10 ft apart without freaking out.

    • @OutlawRides
      @OutlawRides  3 года назад +1

      That can be a tough one! When horses are "buddy sour" it is actually a chemical dependency and as you know it I can be extremely addictive! The neuro chemical is called oxytocin, it is the bonding/pairing drug. It can be like taking your horse through a drug rehab type experience.
      If you have safe and strong facilities you can separate your horses and just wait for the drugs to wear off, this may take several days! I have worked with several horses that were extremely addicted, they climbed over my gates, pushed through fencing and even had one try to climb over the top of my horse trailer that he was tied to to get to his buddy on the other side.
      This can be a very dangerous withdrawal period, watch them closely
      I would need a lot more info as to your facilities, if it's possible move away from each other in separate corals next to each other. After they become comfortable at this distance move them a bit farther apart but still within eyesight of each other. Continue moving them slowly farther apart.
      Another approach is to create a stronger connection with you so that when your horse is with you the horse will get the same oxytocin drugs from you instead of the other horse, this takes time and requires building a close energetic connection with your horse.

    • @seneynah
      @seneynah Год назад

      I just discovered clicker training with horses and treats. That’s how you get them to bond and get these endorphins and dopamine hit from you instead of the friends. I can’t wait to try this on my barn sour horse he loves treats. I just haven’t done it under saddle don’t know why I just realized I should be doing this under saddle duh😮​@@OutlawRides

  • @jordangrendel7788
    @jordangrendel7788 3 года назад +2

    I have 2 horses and they are both very buddy sour. One is a thoroughbred who is a freak when alone. He will destroy fences galloping and stopping/sliding into them and hurt himself. Is there a way to orchestrate something like this video to help them? Is it possible to have only 2 horses and have one leave periodically?

    • @OutlawRides
      @OutlawRides  3 года назад +1

      Yes you can do this with only two horses, who ever is riding the horse that will be cruising will need to be a pretty experienced rider to be able to handle the drama that may be created by the horse. the key is to not pick up the reins and offer any guidance to he horse....simply let him "work" by circling the other horse....when he chooses to leave the horse gently relax inter saddle and offer an opportunity to rest...if the horse turns back towards the other horse...apply light pressure and allow him to "work" as he circles the other horse until he leaves again....REPEAT as needed until the horse can easily be rode away from the buddy horse...seriously this will take a rider that is in somewhat good physical conditioning. oh ya and have some fun!

    • @charannasmith7937
      @charannasmith7937 3 года назад +1

      I’m in the same boat, Jordan. I just don’t have a friend skilled enough to sit my gelding while I trot around 😩

    • @sketchalater4656
      @sketchalater4656 Год назад

      You can always try using a nice sturdy place to tie, like a patience pole. I would tie up the thoroughbred and ride the other horse with a flag. Ride away from the tb, and when the tb calls, come back and using the flag to yield the tb's hindquarters back and forth and put pressure on him, or if the patience pole goes 360, you can just herd the tb round and round. Then ride away and rest both horses, not super far. But gradually increase distance.

  • @roxannee8714
    @roxannee8714 3 года назад

    Okay what part is the "science" part?

    • @OutlawRides
      @OutlawRides  3 года назад +5

      Knowing that the horse is neurochemically drawn to "be with the herd" (oxytocin). Changing the neurochmical state within the horses autonomic nervous system changes behavior. When the horse leaves the buddy horse the oxytocin levels will lower and then the horse will get a dopamine reward (licking and chewing) when he leaves the other horses, This is using science to change the neruochemical state of the horse...

    • @OutlawRides
      @OutlawRides  3 года назад +1

      Pretty much! 👍🏻