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StableTalk - The UK's brightest on-line equestrian magazine, written by
riders for riders
Logical Communication Starts With Grooming
by Ron Meredith
A lot of amateur trainers MythUnderstand what the training
process is all about. They think that training involves
dominating a horse, showing him who's boss. They approach
training as though it were a battle in which one party wins
and the other loses.
Good training is not about confrontation. It's about building
a horse-logical communication system. As trainer, you do
your talking as a non-hunting predator just walking through
the herd or in the role of lead mare in your little herd
of two. But you don't ignore the horse's side of the conversation.
To understand the horse's side of the conversation means
learning horse-speak--how horses say things to one another.
Then you use that knowledge to say things back to the horse
for your own purposes. You want to communicate to the horse
that you like it, that you're glad it's there, that you
like to be around it. You're not going to just grab the
horse and beat it into submission. In terms of horse-speak,
grooming can be a powerful influence you can use to gain
control and trust.
Wild horse survival requires strong herd instinct. Mutual
grooming expresses camaraderie among horses and helps wild
ones bond into a herd. Horses love to be groomed. Use this
to your advantage to make friends with a horse when you
first start working with it and to study how your horse
communicates things to you.
For example, if the horse is totally relaxed and looking
around and sometimes looking back at you then you got some
good quality time going on. Pay attention as you groom the
horse to see where it's sensitive areas are and where it
really enjoys a good scratching. Horses often signal their
pleasure by screwing up their upper lip or by arching or
stretching their neck when you hit an itchy spot. If the
horse pins its ears, swishes its tail, or threatens a kick,
it's saying "back off." There are horses with very thin
skin who dislike coarse brushes but if you groom them properly
without sudden moves using soft brushes and a degree of
pressure that agrees with them, there should be no problem.
When you are grooming, the horse will naturally want to
return the favor because that's what it would do if you
were another horse. If the horse starts chewing on you,
do NOT slap it. If a horse tries to chew on you, you should
have seen it coming if you were paying total attention to
your horse. Grooming is not just moving a brush with your
hand while you daydream about tomorrow. You should be thinking
about now, about this horse. So if the horse wants to groom
you in return, interrupt it unobtrusively. If the head starts
around, and you've been paying attention and have a plan,
you'll just put hand up near the neck to stop the head turning
without making a big sudden attack on the horse. You interrupt
the undesirable behavior without changing the horse's attitude,
excitement level, or interpretation of what's going on.
The safe place by any horse is beside the front legs. If
you are standing beside the front legs and have some way
to control the head, you won't get kicked, bit, or tromped
on if everything turns into a can of worms. So you start
grooming where it is safe--at the shoulders--and you just
keep working both directions. Take your time and keep working
slowly to the back and find all the places. Keep making
your safe bubble bigger and bigger. And by the time you
and the horse speak the same language, the entire horse
will be available to you and things will rarely if ever
fall apart.
If, when you turned it loose, you saw that this horse did
lots of kicking, you would never go to the back of the animal
without taking the lead rope with you. That way, you can
swing the horse's hindquarters away from you by pulling
the head toward you if the horse tries to kick.
Actions and body language are the only things that make
up horse-speak. Save your vocalizing for later. If you use
vocal commands at the horse, you will leave out the horse-speak,
and if you leave out the horse-speak you will be very frustrated
with why the horse won't listen to you. If you always apply
a methodical and directional pressure to create a shape
that the horse feels and understands, then put a word or
signal along with that methodical pressure, the horse may
notice it or may not. However, over a period of time, the
horse will begin to notice it and pick it up as having a
meaning that it feels at that moment. But it is unenforceable.
If you want to talk to yourself, or hum, or sing to yourself
while grooming, however, it is fine. Anything that will
keep your rhythm and relaxation will keep the horse's rhythm
and relaxation.
There are times when you go into someone's barn and all
the horses in there will be in a depressed state because
they don't like where they are and they don't like what
goes on and they don't like anybody. The horses won't make
any fuss, they'll just be mopey and down. Horses that have
a happy thing going on are going to communicate with you
as soon as you go through. One may stick its head out and
tell you that you have no business going by without coming
over to visit. One might try to get you into a game of duck
and bite. But they are all going to be active. They will
be doing anything they want. If you go into a barn and the
horses get up immediately, you know that the horses are
definitely afraid of the people. When you watch people around
horses you will find out very quickly whether or not they
understand horse-speak and have the knack for "nice-ing"
the horses into submission. That is the skill that a lot
of people don't understand.
Really good training is boring to watch. When it starts
getting exciting and looking like a rodeo then you know
that somebody is out of control or scared or angry. Good
training should have about the same activity level as paint
drying.
© 2000 Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre.
All rights reserved.
Instructor and trainer Ron Meredith has refined his "horse
logical" methods for communicating with equines for over
30 years as president of Meredith
Manor International Equestrian Centre: Rt. 1 Box 66,
Waverly, WV 26184; 1-800-679-2603; http://www.meredithmanor.com;
mminfo@meredithmanor.com),
an ACCET accredited equestrian educational institution.
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