The Principles of Training: Isolate, Separate, and Recombine

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
  • Warwick has hundreds of full length training videos filmed with REAL horses, REAL people, REAL problems in REAL time on his online video library.
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Комментарии • 74

  • @SLOROB55
    @SLOROB55 5 месяцев назад

    Love this piece. Thanks.

  • @theponycraze9359
    @theponycraze9359 7 месяцев назад

    15:02 saving this part to watch again later!

  • @4theRun
    @4theRun 4 года назад +3

    Bundy looks like a sweetheart of a horse. He is so calm and attentive, I love watching him.

  • @DianeStPeter
    @DianeStPeter Год назад

    This is the best I have ever heard anyone explain these maneuvers! Thank you Warwick!

  • @KingsMom831
    @KingsMom831 4 года назад +1

    You & Robyn have some beautiful horses, not just because they are BEAUTIFUL, but because of the connection/relationship you develop with each other...🙏🏼😊

  • @michaelschulze6545
    @michaelschulze6545 4 года назад +3

    A pleasure to watch your training videos!

  • @elizabethblackwell6242
    @elizabethblackwell6242 4 года назад +3

    Great explanation. Dressage riders would really get this.

  • @lydiazoschke1236
    @lydiazoschke1236 4 года назад +1

    I followed Warwick's basics groundwork training on my horse that had a problem with bucking, and it helped SO much! He's a completely different horse. Thank you Warwick for all your advice and tips.

  • @jessamassa
    @jessamassa 3 года назад +2

    Thank you for all your wonderful training videos. They are so inspiering. I'm becoming a better trainer for my students and horses.

  • @BarbaraHeim
    @BarbaraHeim 4 года назад +2

    Watched this video, signed up at your website, watched your video about shoulder-in, isolated, separated, recombined problems solved! I am really looking forward to learn so much more and join the journey!

  • @kimnenninger7226
    @kimnenninger7226 4 года назад +1

    This is a really great video. Very concise and methodical.
    Thank you for sharing.

  • @victoriaolender6289
    @victoriaolender6289 4 года назад +2

    I've had instructors try to teach these movements backwards, meaning they try to teach the whole movement without breaking it down into its separate components. The way you break it down makes a heck of a lot more sense to someone who's never done these movements, and who doesn't yet know how all the components work together to achieve the final product. Thank you for being so clear, to both the rider and the horse!
    I find advice like this would be very useful to younger riding instructors because while they know a lot, they may not teach effectively like this because of the pressure that's put on them. I've had mostly young instructors for most of my riding career, and none of them have ever broken stuff down like this. I think it's because they feel like their students have to get the most out of a lesson they possibly can (since they're so expensive), they tend to skip all of the foundation work and go straight to the more complicated movements. Or, they might simply think it's not important or a waste of time. Meanwhile people like me would rather start from square 1 with foundational work like attention work and getting both myself and the horse in a good mental state before getting on at all. I would get more out of that than I would cramming in figures at the walk, trot, and canter, and all the while trying to keep the horse's attention and responsiveness at all three gaits.

    • @elizabethblackwell6242
      @elizabethblackwell6242 4 года назад

      Same. Warwick's approach of breaking down and perfecting components and then, as he says, combine into a whole is aligned to the principles of ethological learning theory.

  • @sarahstephenson8235
    @sarahstephenson8235 4 года назад +3

    During my last lesson, I felt like I had taken 3 steps backwards. I do not have a horse of my own, but alternate between several school horses that each teach me different things. This last lesson was on a 'show' horse who was well trained, is a little out of practice, but teaches me more than most of the others. Breaking down the leg yield and haunches in, as you have here, not only shows me what I was missing at the time, but how to go about fixing it (on my end, not hers!). Thank you for another excellent explanation, you have helped me tons! #journeyon20

  • @kims2735
    @kims2735 3 года назад

    You're videos are really helpful. You are easy to listen to, follow what you're teaching and then retain to apply it to the horse. I wish their was a way to to figure replay the exact video of what im working on when at the barn. Wink I think we need a warwick outdoor screen attached to the side of the barn to play your instructions. Thanks to you and your wife for your passion of horse's,what you do makes a difference.

  • @fenyasiepser3965
    @fenyasiepser3965 4 года назад +1

    Your videos are nothing short of amazing!! They have helped me so much!!

  • @jennyrosd2003
    @jennyrosd2003 2 года назад

    You really have to know what your asking for. I have that prob sometimes. I tend to respond to what he does rather than lead the dance. This is great to bv watch thx

  • @chrisusher7144
    @chrisusher7144 3 года назад

    With my horse was Bundy. Well now I can do a leg yeald and honches in.wow Bundy I enjoy your company your a great trainer I'm saving the last 3 you've done👍

  • @josialoos
    @josialoos 3 года назад

    Great reminder and really nicely taught. Thanks!

  • @carlahawks5835
    @carlahawks5835 4 года назад

    Thanks Warwick.

  • @CC-xk6cp
    @CC-xk6cp 3 года назад

    Hi again WARWICK
    As I anticipated another great vid containing wise information that really works. You have absolutely gotten my attention with your knowledge wisdom and kind spirit. I imagine your training has produced many excellent horses. Thx so much for sharing. I will be catching up with as many vids etc as I can but will always be looking forward to anything new you put out. Thx again...

  • @leannemnelson86
    @leannemnelson86 4 года назад +2

    Looooove this! My horse and I both used to get so easily frustrated, this video (among work with the horse you have today, and the donkey Kong principle particularly) have helped us immensely!! We are progressing so much faster and easier now all thanks to you Warwick and this method. Thanks!! #journeyon20

  • @kohlhawkewaskeen1416
    @kohlhawkewaskeen1416 4 года назад

    While you have said so much that has helped my journey❤️ this is one of the most profound. Simply complex

  • @anniw8444
    @anniw8444 4 года назад

    Thank you so much for this great video! Love learning about the more technical stuff, too!

  • @ac12201
    @ac12201 3 года назад

    Great information. Thank you

  • @nenaddjuric6518
    @nenaddjuric6518 4 года назад

    Thank you !

  • @destinationaddictionsamsar7894
    @destinationaddictionsamsar7894 4 года назад +8

    I really wish you'd do a video on a mustang make over. I just really want to see step by step how you'll train a untouched horse and the methods you use currently.

    • @lazygardens
      @lazygardens 4 года назад +4

      First of all: it's a horse. Just a horse. With a big collection of myths and urban legends around it.
      By the time they are in the adoption corrals they have been herded, penned, fed and watered for weeks as well as loaded, trucked, branded/tagged and had vet checks at least once.
      It's on a level with that 3 year old that went out to pasture with it's mom as an unhandled foal and is just now being brought in for training.

    • @destinationaddictionsamsar7894
      @destinationaddictionsamsar7894 4 года назад +1

      @@lazygardens I really don't care what you just said. And no mustangs are not the same as a untouched 3 year old in pasture with it's mom as you'll never find that because no breeder unless they're neglecting their animals will allow the foal to stay with the mother for that long especially unhandled.
      Not to mention every roundup place is different there are some where the mustangs are more friendly and used to humans but then there's others where the mustangs can't stand being in the same space as a human.

    • @lazygardens
      @lazygardens 4 года назад +3

      @@destinationaddictionsamsar7894 My cousins have ranches. Some of their "pastures" are multiple square miles of meadow, brush and forest with creeks. It's where they graze the horses they are not actively using: unbroke ones (weanlings and up, no stud colts), pack train stock between seasons, spare roundup stock, brood mares taking a year or two off from motherhood, etc.
      Letting them wander in bands in rough country is how you get strong bones, good muscle and hard hooves on an agile ranch horse. It develops a good alert horse that likes doing things, follows a leader, and works well with others. You just have to insert humans into their mental hierarchy as the leader.
      None of their horses, whether coming in unbroke at 3 or 4 for the basics or a veteran of 10 getting a refresher before the next roundup needs special techniques. It's just round pen, ground work, arena work and then on to the cows and trails.
      Watch Schiller's series on that 17-hand Andalusian or the warmblood stallion - those were barn crazy and never had a good herd experience. Whatever worked with them will work with a mustang.

    • @destinationaddictionsamsar7894
      @destinationaddictionsamsar7894 4 года назад +1

      @@lazygardens I don't really care. By doing that you're neglecting their health.

    • @dnulsrot
      @dnulsrot 4 года назад +1

      It's like any horse, a horse is a horse. All you have to think about is what it has learn befor.

  • @tessi6886
    @tessi6886 3 года назад

    Bundy is a very patient horse. He deserves a good roll and some relaxing time 😉

  • @alialhilali9862
    @alialhilali9862 4 года назад +1

    What a horseman

  • @Youreout
    @Youreout 3 года назад

    Is that rear cinch too small for Bundy?

  • @MC-st6id
    @MC-st6id Год назад

    Does anyone know if there's a way to submit a specific question to Warwick?

  • @chrisusher7144
    @chrisusher7144 3 года назад

    Wish my horse s were as well trained as you have Bundy ( wish was the word I ment on my other comment

  • @dnulsrot
    @dnulsrot 4 года назад

    Hi, Warwick, I have look at yours videos and they are realy good. Leg yield is this video about, but I would ask you to reconsider it. What you acttually use is seatbone. Never move the horse with your lower leg as you show in the travers. Mostlly the horse do not speed up when using seatbones, lower leg makes the horse speed up. And simply becuse it is impulsion. Keep on with your videos they are very good, you are always talking about correct things.

    • @elizabethblackwell6242
      @elizabethblackwell6242 4 года назад +1

      Except that the biomechanical research shows that horses can't really feel "seat bones" through the saddle and blanket. It's a bit of a dressage myth.
      “Riders tell me, I only stop the horse with my seat. And I say, ‘no you don’t, if you let the reins go, the horse won’t stop with your seat.’ I have worked in America with Western Trainers, and they showed me horses that really do stop with the seat alone, but that is because they have usually connected the seat with a severe curb rein in earlier training. With reins, the merest touch says so much, whereas with the seat, it has to shout a little especially for lateral movements.”
      Cite 1: Saddle pressure patterns of three different training saddles (normal tree, flexible tree, treeless) in Thoroughbred racehorses at trot and gallop
      S. N. LATIF K. Von PEINEN T. WIESTNER C. BITSCHNAU B. RENK M. A. WEISHAUPT
      First published: 08 November 2010
      Cite 2: The effects of different saddle pads on forces and pressure distribution beneath a fitting saddle
      March 2010Equine Veterinary Journal 42(2):114-8

    • @dnulsrot
      @dnulsrot 4 года назад +1

      @@elizabethblackwell6242 :) it's not the bones that makes the aid. It's a center of pivot system. Feel, respect, release, attityd and more is what counts. Not the leverage of the bit. Folks should listening to what Warwick says not how he do. Ridinga a horse is a signal system. Some systems is just better for man and animal then others system are. And yes, when I do horse arhery I must use my invizible reins, actually I can leave the romal reins in barn. Look at the video from Morocco and use of the invizible roop and post.

    • @kymharris269
      @kymharris269 4 года назад +1

      Elizabeth Blackwell years ago I took on an ex-pacer that had only been ridden bareback at the beach. Apart from that, only harness broken for racing. After a while, without realising it, I had taught him to stop when I braced my seat. I could do it without using the reins. I have never used a curb bit on my horses, only simple snaffles and longer reins. So he could feel the change in my seat, and respond appropriately.

    • @elizabethblackwell6242
      @elizabethblackwell6242 4 года назад +1

      @@dnulsrot I've just cited the research. If you have research to refute what I've said then certainly cite it.

    • @elizabethblackwell6242
      @elizabethblackwell6242 4 года назад

      @@kymharris269 I've just cited the research. If you have research to refute what I've said then certainly cite it.

  • @fayinahay9359
    @fayinahay9359 4 года назад

    me clicks video than looks at time O.O

    • @fayinahay9359
      @fayinahay9359 4 года назад

      its great btw make more long videos please