Sooo many useful tools in this one video. Excellent for the seasoned horse as well when you need a refresher on the basics. Thanks for sharing this with us!
Hi ! Last night, I try the 3 exercises that you mention in this video with my mare and it was a fantastic change. We were off about 2 years and we restart training this month. I'm so grateful please continu your good job ! ❤
Thanks so much for the feedback. I'm glad the tips were helpful and I'm happy to hear that you and your horse are back at it after 2 years off! Great job!
Nice work! Love the exercises, he is doing very well , he is lucky to have you as his trainer 😉, thanks for all the tips and explaining, you are training all your viewers too ❤
My 3 year old Appaloosa filly Im starting is similar in that she is so hard to get impulsion out of. From a halt to walk it is a struggle to unlock her feet, and from walk to trot it's a little easier but she will cowkick before transitioning because my bumping legs annoy her. When she doesn't move, I have her yield her hindquarters by drawing her nose around and bump my legs with escalating pressure, immediately quieting them when she steps forward. Would this be the correct process to repeat until she moves off leg pressure consistently without being stubborn and getting annoyed over it?
Hii! I love your videos and see how much similar is the way we train horses makes me proud! I have a 2 yo that I've been riding for 6 months..she is doing pretty good but she very stiff for the left. I feel it's harder for her the get the left lead at the lope than the other colts so I've been making a lot of shoulder control, flexing and bending exercises. She got better and she can collect really well at jog by now, it's very soft and responsive ... but the lope still really stiff and the lead departure still hard for the left... she has a big preference for the right and it doesn't matter which body position she is at. The vet side is absolutely fine...do you have any advice? (I'm foreign so sorry about any english mistake hehe)
Easily one of the most underrated horse training channels on RUclips, I would expect you to have hundreds of thousands of views!
Those kind of words always give me the encouragement to stick with this channel and keep sharing videos of what we do. Thank you, I appreciate it!
Sooo many useful tools in this one video. Excellent for the seasoned horse as well when you need a refresher on the basics. Thanks for sharing this with us!
I'm so glad you liked the video! Thank you for the feedback, we always appreciate the support and encouragement! 😁
Hi ! Last night, I try the 3 exercises that you mention in this video with my mare and it was a fantastic change. We were off about 2 years and we restart training this month. I'm so grateful please continu your good job ! ❤
Thanks so much for the feedback. I'm glad the tips were helpful and I'm happy to hear that you and your horse are back at it after 2 years off! Great job!
Nice work! Love the exercises, he is doing very well , he is lucky to have you as his trainer 😉, thanks for all the tips and explaining, you are training all your viewers too ❤
Thank you! I appreciate it!
This is so helpful, it exactly what I’m working on, thank you who much for posting this video!
Glad it was helpful! 😀
Check out the playlist here if you want to see how this horse was started from the ground up!:
ruclips.net/p/PLHB-KY5Kw7fJpXrvSwIOlluZ6Ey_cyZE_
Our are amazing..love your training
Thank you! I appreciate your support!
Fantastic video! I just found you and this is just great,full of really sound advice -thank you:)
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching. I appreciate you!
Just found you! Your training are excellent.
Thanks for watching!
My 3 year old Appaloosa filly Im starting is similar in that she is so hard to get impulsion out of. From a halt to walk it is a struggle to unlock her feet, and from walk to trot it's a little easier but she will cowkick before transitioning because my bumping legs annoy her.
When she doesn't move, I have her yield her hindquarters by drawing her nose around and bump my legs with escalating pressure, immediately quieting them when she steps forward. Would this be the correct process to repeat until she moves off leg pressure consistently without being stubborn and getting annoyed over it?
good luck
Hii! I love your videos and see how much similar is the way we train horses makes me proud! I have a 2 yo that I've been riding for 6 months..she is doing pretty good but she very stiff for the left. I feel it's harder for her the get the left lead at the lope than the other colts so I've been making a lot of shoulder control, flexing and bending exercises. She got better and she can collect really well at jog by now, it's very soft and responsive ... but the lope still really stiff and the lead departure still hard for the left... she has a big preference for the right and it doesn't matter which body position she is at. The vet side is absolutely fine...do you have any advice? (I'm foreign so sorry about any english mistake hehe)
what is the difference between the shoulder yield and counter bend?
I have a young horse who’s pretty lazy. How’d you get him to get going in the early stages?
Hello, did you watch the rest of the videos in this series? They might be helpful to you.
Why are you constantly bumping him?