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Training with many
techniques.
I am just going to share with you a fun time I have been having in the
autumn 1998. The thing is that I have been reading and learning all
I can get my hands over about horses, ever since I began reading.
And now either I am on some very fun and open-minded track, or my fuses
are blowing : )
I have for some time tried as well as I could, to read the individual when
training horses, instead of sticking on to some special method that is
supposed to solve all problems. Some horses need dressage to get
to their best level, other need round-penning, other need clicker-training,
other need a kick in the arse etc. etc. Now last summer I was studying
LTJ teqhnicues, and now I am training a youngster and being quilty of herecy
in almost all training methods : )
The thing is, that I was starting a young icelandic palomino horse. In
november I got to these conclusions:
He is really rather clever but he is raised in a herd without any contact
to humans exept being fed hay in a large pasture a few months every winter.
So, he tries his best, but he is just sooo afraid of being touched, and
hates the confinement of the barn, being used to the freedom of the hills.
So what have we been doing the week since we started training him?
Well, to begin with, I started putting a body rope on him, in a very small
pen, and touching him (untied) all over with a wand (like Tellington-Jones
does). He tolerated it for a while, but then he suddenly felt too
enclosed and began kicking nonstop, not meanly, just frustrated, and I
yelled inside my head "help, those damn american methods are going to kill
me one day", as it took me several minutes to get out of the pen without
a broken bone : ) Well, I reached to his halter and got it after
a few tries, put him in his stall and did lots of Ttouches for a while.
But, since he was tied and fighting the rope, this wasn't doing much to
relax him, and he didn't dare to lower his head. I couldn't
lead him or have him untied, as he would have run off then and even kicked
me by the way. So, this wasn't reaching his heart,and I went home
and thought.
The
palomino.
The next day I round-penned him in a longeing-line, as I do not have a
round pen. After a while he joined up, and I could lead him, a bit
hesitant, around in the pen. After that, I did lots of Ttouches,
and now he accepted them and relaxed a bit. He was though very vary,
didn't want to lower his head and was extremely tight-lipped when I did
mouth-work. I went home and thought.
The next 4 days I longed him, so he learned commands like trot, walk, whoa
and turn, and learned to have his feet picked up. He now tolerated
the touches and the wand, and I did some Team-groundwork, and some "normal"
groundwork after the longeing, because it relaxes his nerves to spend some
of his energy. But the worry wrinkles around his eyes were deep,
he was not happy, merely tolerating. I went home and thought.
I decided to start clicker-training. He got the idea very fast, but
the only treat he wanted to accept was the old crummy hay I am feeding
him, he hasn't realised that some exotic things like grain and grasspellets
are edible, just pushes them away in his stall. Well, now we went
for a walk in the pen, and did lots of the same groundwork as in the last
days. He knew the groundwork already, but I clicked for every improvement
in relaxation, and got it quickly. So, the worry wrinkles lessened,
and he was more relaxed in the groundwork and during the Ttouches.
He is doing a rather quick adaption, but the funny thing is, that I can
not thank any one training method for where I am today.
He learned to be led through round-penning. He learned to tolerate
touching and to be lead in other ways through Team-work. He learned
voice commands and to obey the lead in turning through longeing.
He softened his eyes and learned more relaxation through combination of
Ttouches and clicking. So, I am a very happy trainer, with a horse
that is getting happyer every day. I am going to keep on doing those
same things untill he is beginning to trust me very much, and look forward
to my company, wether that takes a week or a month, before starting him
under saddle. All of theese methods are helping the horse to turn
from being a bundle of nerves to being a companion.
So maybe no one way is the only, true, golden way to a higher level in
horsemanship, exept the way of learning and experimenting and trying.
While I keep an open mind to use everything that can help the horse to
learn and understand, the goal is that the horse understands people in
general, not just me. Natural horsemanship methods can be used in
such a way that the horse's next rider will get in no conflicts with the
horse, even though that rider has only learned traditional methods.
That is the main goal, a satisfied rider on a satisfied horse, the ways
to get to the goal can though be as different as the horses are many.
Lukka.
History
I Characteristics I Colors
I Breeding goals I Gaits
I Training I Raising our
horses I Our broodmares I Foals
1999 I Foals 2000 I Onelist
I Location I Weather
I Winter gallery I Summer
gallery I Us at Langhus I Icelandic
cow I Icelandic sheep I Icelandic
sheepdog I Articles from the website IWebrings
I Link-collection I Horses
for sale I