Raising Young Horses Resource

0104_03

There’s nothing better than working with a foal and watching him mature and grow into himself. Clinton is often asked how he progresses a young horse’s training, from imprinting to starting the horse under saddle. Here’s his rule of thumb:

From the time your foal is born until you wean him at 4 to 6 months of age, he should know everything in the Foal Training Kit, which is basically the Fundamentals Kit modified for young horses. He doesn’t need to be perfect at each of the exercises, but he must be able to do each one well enough to receive a B+.

Then after he’s weaned, you can start getting pickier with the Fundamentals and also start working on the groundwork exercises in the Intermediate Kit with him.

I personally imprint all of my foals and then start taking them through the exercises in the Foal Training Kit. On average, it takes roughly six weeks to take a foal through the series. Once the foal knows the series, then I turn him out in a pasture and review the exercises every couple of weeks until he’s weaned.

When it’s time to wean him, I’ll bring him up to the barn and then spend several weeks refining the Fundamentals and teaching him the Intermediate groundwork exercises. Once he knows the Intermediate groundwork exercises, I’ll turn him back out in the pasture, reviewing the exercises every couple of weeks.

When he gets to be a yearling, I’ll start the roundpenning exercises with him. I don’t worry about teaching him the groundwork exercises in the Advanced Kit until I’m ready to start him under saddle.

Learn more about training a young horse in our training resource.

More News

Back to all news

See All
DUHapp_QA

7 years ago

Can I View Downloaded Content without Opening the Downunder App?

Answer: No. In order to view any content you download (videos, Arena Mates, or books) to your device, you must…

Read More
1206_tip

9 years ago

Training Tip: Avoid These Trail Riding Mistakes

If you want your horse to be an all-around broke mount, it’s important to ride him outside the confines of…

Read More
NWCfind

6 years ago

Find It on the No Worries Club: Introducing Spurs

To train a horse that’s both responsive and relaxed, you have to balance impulsion exercises with suppling exercises. Too much…

Read More
FILES2f20162f072f0719_07.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Summer Journal Out This Month

The summer edition of the No Worries Journal arrives in No Worries Club members’ mailboxes this month. The issue is…

Read More