A Key Exercise to Earn Your Horse’s Respect

0125_02

One of the most important exercises you can teach your horse is how to back up. The better you can get a horse to back up, the more respectful and responsive he will be in everything else that you ask him to do. A good backup is the foundation of the stop as well as collection. Clinton teaches his horses four separate methods of backing:

Method 1: Tap the Air
Method 2: Wiggle, Wave, Walk and Whack
Method 3: Marching
Method 4: Steady Pressure

Each of these four methods share a common overall goal: To get the horse to back up and move respectfully out of your space any time you ask. It’s important to teach the horse each method, not just one or two, because each one teaches him to back away from a different type of pressure. The four methods are designed to be taught in the order listed above for your safety and to be best understood by the horse.

Clinton explains how to teach a horse each of the four methods of backing up in the Fundamentals Series. Premium No Worries Club members have access to the training kit’s videos and Arena Mates. Learn more about the Fundamentals Series on our website.

More News

Back to all news

See All
Clinton Anderson Certified Clinicians

14 years ago

Introducing Our Newest Clinton Anderson Certified Clinicians

Jaclyn Sansaver Certified Clinician – Fundamentals Jaclyn was on the back of a horse before she could walk and honed…

Read More
0214_01a

3 years ago

Welcoming Cold Creek Equine to Our Team

Clinton is proud to add Cold Creek Equine, the manufacturer of a highly engineered and technologically advanced equine spa, to…

Read More
FILES2f20162f012f0119_07.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Jeff Davis Shares His Most Valuable Lesson Learned

My most valuable lesson learned from Clinton is how to be a thinking horseman. That’s something that Clinton has spent…

Read More
FILES2f20162f062f0621_06.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Cinch Fitting Tips and Giveaway

By Classic Equine The cinch is the lifeline that holds your saddle in place, which in turn keeps you in…

Read More