Help for Cinchy and Cold-Backed Horses

0809_01

A “cinchy” or “cold-backed” horse has a tendency to overreact and possibly buck when pressure is applied around his belly or flank area. It’s normal for a horse to feel reactive whenever this area is squeezed tightly. Horses hate tight, narrow spaces or feeling claustrophobic, so when you wrap a rope or girth around a horse’s belly and pull it tight, it can make the horse feel trapped and uncomfortable. Horses are also protective of their belly because they don’t have a lot of muscle or tissue there to protect their abdomen and organs. It’s a part of horses’ self-preservation instinct to be very protective of their bellies, their hocks and legs down to their hooves, and from their ears forward.

In the training guide, “Solving Cinchiness,” Clinton answers common questions about cinchy horses and explains how to build your horse’s confidence about being saddled and feeling the cinch tightened up on him. Read the article on the Downunder Horsemanship website.

More News

Back to all news

See All
FILES2f20152f062f0630_06.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Financial Help for Future Clinicians

If you want something bad enough, you’ll find a way. If you don’t, you’ll find an excuse. That’s the way…

Read More
FILES2f20152f092f0922_02.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Meet Clinton’s Performance Horses

You’ve seen good performance horses work. They move with supreme athletic ability – sliding, turning back a cow, spinning or…

Read More
0421_01

6 years ago

Quarantine Horsemanship Goals Contest

A new contest that focuses on setting and achieving horsemanship goals in the Method is up and running for No…

Read More
0131_01

9 years ago

Clemson, SC Gets the 2017 Walkabout Tour Started This Weekend

Clinton is bringing the Method to the T. Ed Garrison Livestock Arena in Clemson, South Carolina this weekend for our…

Read More