Put Miles Under Your Horse’s Feet

0510_02

Everyone wants their horse to be a safe, dependable partner they can trust in the arena or on the trail. A key factor in getting your horse to that point in his training is putting steady miles under his feet. When Clinton apprenticed with Australian horseman Gordon McKinlay, the two would muster cattle for nearby stations. Many times, they’d ride green-broke training horses to give the horses experience.

“Gordon would tell me all the time that a well-broke horse needs three things: long rides, wet saddle pads and concentrated training,” Clinton says. “Mustering cattle on those young horses gave us the opportunity to work on all three. We’d be gone for most of the day, so they were getting long rides. During periods of the ride, we’d lope and have to get after the cattle, so the horses got wet saddle pads. We’d also have the opportunity to bend the horse’s around and work on softening and suppling their body.”

Oftentimes, the horse they’d leave on felt like a completely different horse when they’d return. “Gordon would always say, ‘Leave on a young horse, come back on an old one.’ There’s something about putting steady miles under a horse’s feet that gets him to settle in and tune in to you,” Clinton says.

Listen to Clinton explain this lesson he learned from Gordon in the Methodology Series video “Leave on a Young Horse, Come Back on an Old One” on the No Worries Club website or log on to the Downunder Horsemanship app. The app is a free download from the App Store and Google Play.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1211_03

6 years ago

Wanted: Nonprofit Organization to Benefit From the Montana Walkabout Tour

We’re looking for an equine-related nonprofit organization to join our team at the Kalispell, Montana Walkabout Tour. At each tour…

Read More
NWCfind

6 years ago

Find it on the No Worries Club: Jumping and Crossing Over Obstacles

Teaching a horse to cross and jump over obstacles builds a horse’s confidence and tests how much he respects and…

Read More
1203_01

1 year ago

Dirt-Road Training Continues

In the December No Worries Club digital download, Professional Clinician Kristin Hamacher and Patron are back for part two of…

Read More
ritchie_blog

5 years ago

Ritchie Waterers: 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