Question: I received some
good comments and an interesting question from an individual who
works with Mustangs up in the Shasta area. After reading my October
article on natural horsemanship, the use of pressure and release,
she wants to know what is “natural” about the natural part of
horsemanship when pressure is used? She suggests that we look at
letting go of the pressure and take more time working with each
horse.
Answer:
My reader agrees with taking the time to allow a horse to let you
know when you can move onto the next step in training. When a horse
is quiet and accepting of the lesson, we know we can go on to the
next level of training. This approach works much better than
pushing a horse and forcing it to accept something new before the
previous lesson is solid and the horse is consistent in response to
the cue. I really believe this and my reader does too.
When my reader
is working with her Mustangs, she has had a better response working
without pressure or the standard equipment (halters, lead ropes).
She works with the horses at liberty, using only her voice, eyes and
hands. This is only my personal opinion but I have worked with a
lot of Mustangs and many types of domesticated horses and I believe
that all horses are individuals. All horses have the flight
instinct, some more than others. I once had a Thoroughbred come in
for training and that horse had an incredible flight instinct. When
I first walked quietly into the 60-foot round pen with her, she
began to race around at 90 miles an hour. There was no danger of
the horse hurting herself but if I had brought in a lunge whip or
other piece of equipment, the horse might have run through the rails
and injured herself. The emotional level of each horse dictates how
much pressure the horse can tolerate and must be evaluated early in
the training.
I recently
worked starting Mustangs at the Wild Horse and Burro Expo in Reno,
Nevada. They had two Mustangs in separate round pens. One was a
little red roan that had enough curiosity that when I walked up to
the round pen, she actually came up to me. Once she started moving
forward, I backed away and took the pressure off her and let her
know that she was doing the right thing. Though I could reach
through the rails and touch her head, had I been in the pen she
would have struck out or tried to bite me. Her reaction to pressure
was much more fight than flight. The other Mustang was a two-year
old grey. When my focus was on the grey, just looking at her from
about 75 feet away, she started snorting and moving away. She had a
high flight instinct and reacted to the pressure by moving off.
When you work
with horses you are always working with pressure and release as that
is how a horse learns. We can see that dynamic at work when a new
horse is introduced into a pasture or big corral. There is always a
lead horse and that horse will apply as much pressure as needed to
the new horse to exert his or her authority. This pressure will
escalate from a look, swinging the hind quarters around onto a kick
or a bite until the new horse moves off. When the new horse moves
off, the pressure is released. The escalation of the pressure to
change behavior is a natural behavior and we utilize that same
concept in training.
When you look
at a horse, you are exerting a form of pressure with your body
language, just as the lead horse does. Some horses, such as the
Thoroughbred and the Mustang I worked up in Reno, have extreme
reactions. I was working the Mustang in a 45-foot round pen and
I’ll admit, I would have liked to have been in a 60-foot pen. She
didn’t run into the fence and I allowed her to move around the round
pen at whatever speed she wanted. If I had tried to block her and
slow her, she would probably have run into the fence, tried to jump
over the side of the pen, or she would have run over me. I stayed
as quiet as possible, letting her continue to move around and in
about 20 minutes I could see her drop from a frantic canter to a
quiet canter to a trot. Once she was moving at a trot, with nothing
in my hands, I went out ahead of her and suggested that she change
directions.
Two things you
can take to the bank, one — pressure and release does work with all
horses and, two — if you control a horse’s feet, you control the
mind. My reader suggested that you can do this out in the pasture
and I agree. It will take more time but you can do it. I have
worked in a round pen or large corral and taught horses to turn and
face me and have put a halter on for the first time. It is not the
size of the enclosure but what we do. Once you step into a round
pen or a pasture with a horse as sensitive as a Mustang, and some
are so sensitive to sound that they can hear you a mile away, you
are exerting a form of pressure. I have worked with domestic horses
that panicked at the sound of a plastic bag being rattled. I worked
with one horse whose reaction was so strong that I had to start at
the far end of the arena which is about 80 feet long. I work with
a plastic bag to sack out a horse to teach the horse to deal with
the pressure of different, scary objects and the unexpected.
Sacking a horse out with a plastic bag and a tarp makes a horse much
more safe on the trail where the unexpected can always occur.
There has to be
a point in time, when a horse that will be ridden must submit to
equipment. With the grey Mustang I worked up in Reno, on the first
day I could take hold of the lead rope attached to her halter. By
the second session I could teach her to lunge and stop her feet
using the lead rope and halter. It took some time and it took some
trust on her part but the escalation of pressure was in increments.
In other words, I started out with her moving away from me when I
looked at her from 75 feet away. By the end of the first session I
could reach the lead rope and start teaching her to yield to the
pressure of something around her face. By the end of the second
session I could drag a tarp around her and yes, she exhibited some
flight instinct but she did not bolt.
I’ve had
Mustangs come into clinics and the only person who has ever worked
with the horse was the owner. They had developed a relationship and
a level of trust. However, when something else came along outside
that realm of trust, like me or another person, and the horse
reverted to the Mustang flight instinct
I’ve had many
horses in training considered problems but I don’t necessarily think
of them as problems but as horses who have never had their emotional
levels dealt with. Some horses do really well in the arena but when
they get out on the trail and something unexpected happens they bolt
or buck. The unexpected object or occurrence causes more pressure
than anyone has worked with, and the horse can’t handle it. The
owner and the horse are not safe because the horse has not had the
opportunity to learn to accept more pressure. It must start with
increments.
About 11 years
ago a woman came in for an evaluation of her horse and while she was
waiting for me to finish with someone else, she took her horse into
the round pen. There was a tarp laying on the ground and she put it
over the horse. She asked me if the horse was supposed to be scared
of the tarp and I laughed and told her that people pay me a lot of
money to do that. Here, the flight instinct in the horse was very
low and it took a lot of pressure to get this horse to move its
feet. This is the opposite of the Mustangs and domestic horses that
we have discussed with very high flight instincts.
I think
everyone who successfully works with horses has an approach that
works for them. I don’t think there is any right or wrong way other
than the use of too much pressure, cruelty or abuse. If you are
getting results, then stay with it. However, we also need to think
about who we are training the horse for. If I am training a horse
for me to ride, I may not do as much with ground manners or
de-spooking. If I am training a horse for a client, I must
consider the client’s skill level. I always think about what the
client needs to be able to ride that horse, not just what I would
need. I have a limited amount of time and the lessons must be
solid. Also, we tend to train our horses to respond only to us and
not to other humans. Most of my clients are women and sometimes
they have children who will run up to the horses. If the horses
haven’t had to learn to deal with this kind of pressure, a child
could get hurt. The same is true with dogs. We have several dogs
on the property, including two Jack Russell Terriers, and the horses
learn to deal with them.
Keep these
things in mind as you work with your horse. I hope this helps you
in the future with your horse. Just remember that all horses are
different and they have different levels of the flight instinct. We
need to work with each horse’s individual personality.
God Bless,
Charles Wilhelm
It’s Never Ever the Horse’s Fault |