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StableTalk - The UK's brightest on-line equestrian magazine, written by
riders for riders
Trick
Horses Vs. Trained Horses
by Ron Meredith
When
youngsters come to Meredith Manor, one of the first things
I show them is a big ball of string. Now if I asked them
to sit down right then and there and eat that whole ball
of string, they'd find that pretty gross. But if they started
at the end, which is actually the beginning, and they swallowed
a very little bit at a time--very methodically, very logically,
very calmly--ultimately they would finish it. Then they'd
say, "Well, look at me! I swallowed that whole ball of string!"
Training
a horse is identical to swallowing a ball of string, both
from the trainer's perspective and from the horse's viewpoint.
One of the most common ways people get in trouble training
horses is that they ask their horse to take too big a bite
of string at one time. When you're working with a baby horse,
each thing you teach him must be taught as one little word,
one little bit of language, that you'll eventually put together
to hold a conversation.
A horse
cannot make a connection between two things with more than
two degrees of separation. The first degree away from what
he already knows should be something he "feel." For example,
heeding him up into the corner of an arena makes him feel
like he's going to get trapped. The second degree can be
a little more arbitrary--the trainer turns her primary line
as they reach the corner and creates an opening that the
horse can move into.
So he
turns. Once the horse is changing his direction in response
to a change in direction of the handler's primary line,
the trainer can build on that understanding to teach different
sizes and shapes of turns. And so on. That means if you're
trying to teach him something new that's more than two steps
away from something he already understands, he's not really
going to get it. If you get too far away from what he already
knows, you're asking him to bite off too much string. Some
people do manage to teach a horse something that's unrelated
to what he already knows.
By repeating
a cue and rewarding the horse's successful guesses, you
can put a cue or signal on him so that when you do a particular
thing, he'll give you a particular response. You can also
do this by associating something the horse already understands
with a particular signal. But a cue or signal only produces
a preconditioned amount of an activity. You won't be able
to change the speed, direction or intensity of the response.
You can ask for the activity but you can't moderate it.
You've got a trick horse but you haven't got a trained horse.
Some trainers ask a horse to bite off more string than he
can chew because they confuse cause and effect.
Just
being able to cause a horse to do something is not the same
as training him in a way that each thing he learns becomes
the basis for another step. You are not developing any understanding
that you can build on to teach him other things. For example,
taking a horse in a round pen and chasing him around then
jumping in front of him or yelling or flipping a rope so
he whirls around and changes direction may make someone
look like they're in control of the horse.
But
they are not creating a feeling of a shape that the horse
can understand so that he'll give you that shape again when
you create that feeling again but under different circumstances
in a different place. When people chase a horse in a round
pen, he tends to motorcycle around, leaning to the inside
and counterbalancing himself by sticking his head to the
outside. It's a great way to teach a horse to fall down.
And that's not the shape you want him to remember and give
you again when you start riding him on a circle.
Used
properly, a round pen can help a horse begin to understand
how to work in a corridor of aids on a circle. For example,
as his training progresses, we eventually want our horse
to carry his head just a little to the inside of a circle
for different reasons. So if we're heeding a horse around
in a circle on a lead rope using a round pen as one side
of our corridor of aids, we're already asking him to carry
his head a little to the inside and creating a feel for
that circle shape we want.
Later,
when we introduce seat bone pressures and leg pressures
and bit pressures to create a feel for that same circle
shape, we can go back to the round pen and use part of an
already familiar corridor of aids he felt as a specific
shape in groundwork to help the horse move one or two degrees
to an understanding of the new aids under saddle. Since
aids can be moderated, you can use them to create new levels
of understanding in something the horse already knows.
For
example, once the horse feels a particular corridor of aids
as a canter shape, you can use one or more of those aids
to moderate things like the length of his strides or the
number of strides he takes within a particular time frame.
If you've only taught the horse to canter by kicking his
shoulder, he'll canter.
But
he'll only do it at a particular speed, a particular length
of stride or whatever else you've told him to do when you
put that signal on him. Now you've got a trick horse. Real
training is about building a horse-logical language made
up of corridors of pressures the horse can feel as specific
physical shapes. If you've taught those shapes using aids,
you can modify the aids to modify the shapes. Now you can
play any horse game you want.
© 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, an ACCET accredited
equestrian educational institution.
Rt.
1 Box 66
Waverly, WV 26184
(800)679-2603
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