Training Guide to Safely Ride Your Horse in a Group

0209_03

While you are training your trail horse, Clinton recommends to ride the horse outside the arena by yourself. That way it is just the two of you concentrating on the training sessions. “There are already going to be a lot of distractions for your horse when you first take him outside the arena, he doesn’t need the added distraction of worrying about another horse,” Clinton says. “When you get two or more horses on the trail, they have a tendency to want to race one another and get reactive. The more horses in the group, the more each horse’s prey animal tendencies come out. When you’re on a well-trained trail horse, this isn’t a problem, and it’s even fun to be on the trail in a big group. However, on an inexperienced horse, you’re just setting him up for disaster.”

When your horse is solid and dependable on the trail by himself, then introduce him to riding in a group. “One of the first things to do when introducing your horse to a group is to show him that you can still control his feet,” Clinton says. “He needs to understand that no matter how many other horses may be present, you are still the one he needs to listen to.”

In the training guide, “Safely Ride Your Horse in a Group,” Clinton shares Cloverleaf Mayhem, an exercise to help introduce your horse to group riding. The exercise allows you to put steady miles on your horse and get him comfortable with traffic because the other horses will be coming at him from all directions—behind him, in front of him, alongside, etc.

Read the training article now on the Downunder Horsemanship website.

More News

Back to all news

See All
ritchie_blog

3 years ago

100 Years of American Made

  100 Years Strong & Enduring In 1921, Thomas Ritchie patented the first automatic waterer valve that solved many of…

Read More
FILES2f20162f032f0315_02.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Now Available: The Trail Riding Kit

The much anticipated Fundamentals In Action on the Trail kit is now available to help you train your horse to…

Read More
0612_Tip

8 years ago

Training Tip: Ask Clinton: Reacting to Other Horses

Q: I consider my 10-year-old Quarter Horse to be bombproof, but she starts acting up when we trail ride and…

Read More
NWCfind

8 years ago

Find it on the No Worries Club Website: The Cigar Exercise

When it comes to teaching his horses how to do flying lead changes, Clinton relies on the Cigar Exercise to…

Read More