How to Make a Bombproof Horse (in 6 minutes)

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  • Опубликовано: 13 дек 2024

Комментарии • 65

  • @brendacorey1520
    @brendacorey1520 Год назад +16

    Some horses are just born more alert and therefore more likely to be spooky, especially when taken out alone. If you want a bombproof horse, start with the right horse. Don't pick the high headed horse that notices everything, pick the one who doesn't even look up when a big truck goes by with a rattling load and no muffler. I have a lifetime of horse experience, almost all of it solo riding and some horses will forever be on red alert. Choose the one who ignores gunfire, traffic, deer, whatever. Happy and safe riding to all.

    • @HorsemanshipAsAnArt
      @HorsemanshipAsAnArt  Год назад +1

      Thank you and happy and safe riding to you.

    • @modocroughstock5700
      @modocroughstock5700 11 месяцев назад +1

      Good points, bloodlines, breeding plays a part for sure..

    • @modocroughstock5700
      @modocroughstock5700 11 месяцев назад

      Videos so good, I review a few times each.. still know alot less than most real horseman and women

    • @charliewhon6548
      @charliewhon6548 4 месяца назад +1

      @@modocroughstock5700
      Typically, also horses with larger bone structure tend to be less flighty.

  • @Amber-mv8wz
    @Amber-mv8wz Год назад +7

    Years back I attended a clinic being given by a famous trainer who asked the audience what they'd do if while out riding alone they came out of the woods into a small clearing by a road & saw a rattling dump truck with its load covering tarp flapping in the wind coming towards them. He got the usual sort of answers about dismounting, circling the horse, etc. & then he called on me. I said I'd stop facing the road, pitch the horse slack & light a cigarette. The audience laughed. He didn't, he asked me why I'd do that & I explained that assuming this wasn't my first ride on this horse it would know that a stop, totally slack reins & a cigarette signaled a nice long air break for him & he'd best take full advantage of it because we'd go right back to work as soon as I was done with my smoke. I'm sure it wasn't exactly the answer he was looking for, but he liked it well enough because, as you say, consistency cures a whole lot of ails. Consistency in any form builds walls around a horse that make it feel safe & confident in any situation. Bombproof.

    • @HorsemanshipAsAnArt
      @HorsemanshipAsAnArt  Год назад +4

      I love your answer and you are 100 percent correct in my book. I had a real life situation on a three year old one time involving a train coming behind me and a cliff on the other side. IT was a situation that would either work or kill us both so I just relaxed determined to meet St. Peter with clean shorts. The Filly grabbed one a little and when I didn't she relaxed and kept trotting between the train and the cliff till the train passed. Its all that could be done. Thanks for the comment .

  • @Inca1122
    @Inca1122 Год назад +3

    Came here to comment that even me not having the experience, i have noticed that in 4 years of consistent handling, my horse is less bothered by XYZ. As I fine tune my leadership, that is what is helping my once reactive, high whorled (just watched that vid) horse. Thank u for another great vid!

  • @modocroughstock5700
    @modocroughstock5700 Год назад +4

    Good morning everybody thanks for coming over to the channel today... All A- I comment punch and go.. working.. great video

  • @Cecilyeg
    @Cecilyeg Год назад +9

    And the greatest of those is trust. If your horse trusts you they will do anything for you.

  • @bryanmontgomery4050
    @bryanmontgomery4050 Год назад +3

    Raised one between a daycare center and a rifle range, only thing he was ever scared of was an ostrich!!! Hahaha

  • @dylaningle3113
    @dylaningle3113 Год назад +4

    Great explanation. Trust on both sides ive always thought.

  • @janboogaerts1616
    @janboogaerts1616 Год назад +7

    Probably the best explanation of what a broke horse is I ever heard

  • @johnhutcheson8869
    @johnhutcheson8869 Год назад +4

    Very good. I was starting a colt one fall and he was doing so well. I could do anything
    with him and had even ridden him to the sawmill with all that equipment
    working up there. But he began to get nervous and one afternoon when the
    spreader body truck rattled down the driveway and a helicopter flew over, it
    really got to him. He didn't blow then but waited until 10 minutes later when
    I was at the mailbox. I opened the box, got the mail out and let him walk off
    while I zipped a letter open. When I went to turn that letter over, he went
    into a dead run and bucked at the same time. Turning the page was the
    proverbial “straw that broke the “camel’'s back”. It took me more than a
    quarter mile to get him turned with one rein and there was the real
    possibility he was going to fall with me. But I got him turned. There was a
    trail of mail for 400 yards and I had to start over with the colt. It had all been
    too much, too soon. Slow down! But he made a great horse. I rode him on a 100 mile circle in the Teton Wilderness.

  • @ByronRodgers-p3w
    @ByronRodgers-p3w Год назад +4

    Brett, I think you have a pretty good handle on it. After chasing this issue for many years I have pretty much come to the same conclusion. I have even rode a couple of horses through a few civillian mounted patrol clinics, and I really think it just comes down to how much you trust each other.

    • @HorsemanshipAsAnArt
      @HorsemanshipAsAnArt  Год назад +4

      Thanks, im not always sure I have a handle on anything lol. Yeah in the end its just a matter of being together in lots of situations.

  • @DryCreekWranglerSchool
    @DryCreekWranglerSchool Год назад +12

    Excellent explanation. Would it be a fair assessment in a way to say that to make a bomb proof horse you have to be a bombproof rider? He knows and he has learned that he can trust you, and as you said, he knows you’re not going to get him in a wreck.

    • @HorsemanshipAsAnArt
      @HorsemanshipAsAnArt  Год назад +4

      yes I think that is a really good way of putting it. Wish I had thought of that.

    • @Inca1122
      @Inca1122 Год назад +1

      I too love this explanation. Thank u!

  • @WilliamH490
    @WilliamH490 Год назад +5

    Excellent teaching, it’s exactly how it works with following the Lord, do ya trust Him during maneuvers. Thanks for the lesson, I learn a lot about life by watching animals.

  • @canicegarth280
    @canicegarth280 8 месяцев назад +1

    Watched this explanation again has I do several of your excellent talks….
    Such great common sense,
    paints a cool horse…. ..
    Good luck with move….

  • @davidgregg2778
    @davidgregg2778 Год назад +2

    One of your best videos Brett!

  • @TheMoose1111
    @TheMoose1111 Год назад +3

    Beautifully explained; appreciate ya!

  • @edswalkinghorses
    @edswalkinghorses Год назад +2

    Thanks, this is great advice!

  • @jessepitt
    @jessepitt Год назад +3

    This is my horse. He’s unrefined but he’s never scared of anything. He doesn’t care about anything but doing the job in front of him.

  • @canicegarth280
    @canicegarth280 9 месяцев назад +2

    Excellent explanation…..
    I’m crazy for Paint….. please keep me posted if u ever want to sell paint…..
    Consistency!!!!
    Yes sir!!!
    Love 3 yr old kids and horses…
    Paint is a unique horse👌
    Thomas is great too:) ha

  • @joelhamilton6720
    @joelhamilton6720 Год назад +3

    Once and done, does not exist with horses ... Well said Sir

  • @danfields3341
    @danfields3341 Год назад

    Good stuff as always...

  • @dylaningle3113
    @dylaningle3113 Год назад +2

    I want to know more about roping the pig???

  • @elizastar1973
    @elizastar1973 Год назад +3

    Well, aren't you just gorgeous.

  • @jth1195
    @jth1195 Год назад +4

    You are a great horseman, therefore A horse will eventually get bomb proof just by being around you. Exposure surely helps. Around here there is absolutely nothing to do with a horse. But, roping PIGS , ....hhmmmm

  • @equinekindergarten5169
    @equinekindergarten5169 Год назад +1

    How do you find this patreon thing?

  • @economyrvandtrailerrepair9059
    @economyrvandtrailerrepair9059 Год назад +2

    My favorite topic! Might be that unrelenting exposure can get you brain dead horses?. I Don't know of anywhere you can order up a string of lesson horses if there were I'd get one in every color. We expose our lesson horses as they're ridden we have many different exercises the horses know forwards and backwards that's why we can switch up riders from adults to itty-bitty kids and get consistency and predictably. Showing your horse new stuff is way fun and when done during their job can 'buy' you a bit more time before they tend to get bothered. That's how you make lesson horses.

  • @MarshallMcCrory
    @MarshallMcCrory 3 месяца назад +2

    😂😂😂😂😂........
    NOK SUCH THING AS a
    BOMBPROOF.......JUST a HORSE that hasn't found the right bomb.

    • @HorsemanshipAsAnArt
      @HorsemanshipAsAnArt  3 месяца назад +2

      Good point. The whole idea was a play on words, you can't make one bomb proof you can just ride them and make them confident.

  • @markmahnken6409
    @markmahnken6409 Год назад +2

    I guess I will have to throw away my blue tarp, flag and loud radio now. Had a horse once that was deathly afraid of pigs, never did get over it. Then again he wasn't any good outside of a fence either. Lions, tigers and bears.

  • @jackkrag
    @jackkrag Год назад +2

    damn, i didn't think of a marching band..good call

  • @estherstahl1253
    @estherstahl1253 Год назад +1

    I would say but Him to work

  • @speyman4473
    @speyman4473 Год назад +1

    Switching cars..

  • @gerrycoleman7290
    @gerrycoleman7290 11 месяцев назад +1

    Not a bombproof horse in 6 minutes, 6 hours, 6 days, .......ever.