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Re: [RC] Questions For Trainers - Quentin & Libby Llop

The study was reported in Science News three or four years ago. I don't
save them. It's a weekly magazine.

Beth Walker wrote:
I would be interested in a reference to this study, because that was
my experience when I was raising / training my old horse. I had him
from the time he was born, but because I work, most of my training
sessions had to be on the weekend, as I only had time for grooming and
turnout on the week nights.

I remember trying to increase the frequency of the lessons for a
while, because that was the advice I got -- "do it every day".
However, he simply didn't seem to "get" the new lesson until about 3 -
5 days had elapsed. Then it would click. Since the lesson would
"click" at about the same rate on a weekend training schedule, I quit
worrying about it. Why aggravate him and frustrate me with repetitions
he didn't need, and couldn't process? I figured he needed the time to
integrate the lesson, and repeating it didn't seem to help.

That was just my experience with one horse -- your milage may vary.


On Apr 20, 2007, at 1:18 PM, Quentin & Libby Llop wrote:

I saw a study that found that horses learned the most for the amount of
training time spent with once a week sessions. Obviously that isn't
practical for a professional trainer as it would take a very long time
to put much training time in, but it's nice to know for us do-it
-yourselfers who can't get on all of them every day. Libby

geckogal85@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
How many days a week is reasonable for me to expect my trainer to work
with him? I have a woman who wants to come to my house and use my
facilities, which makes me more comfortable but she can only come 3
days a week.

*/heidi larson <ribbitttreefrog@xxxxxxxxx>/* wrote:

Can I visit my horse anytime?

Can I watch your training session?

Can I be included in the training sessions at some time
towards the end of the month or 60 days?

How many days per week and how long is each ride typically?


How safe is the facility and by that I mean, can someone
show up and load up your horse and leave without being
stopped or questioned by an owner or manager of the
facility?

Does the trainer ride the horse, or one of his/her
apprentices? This doesn't really matter to me personally,
but it's nice to know in advance who will be doing the work
and just how supervised are apprentices should they be the
ones riding.

Will there be trail experience or just arena?

Will they feed what you want fed?

If you can visit the facility while you ask questions, look
for cleanliness, do the horses walk up to the trainer like
the really like him/her, are there spur marks or sores in
the corners of their mouths?

Does the trainer adjust his/her protocol for different
types of horses? - sensitive horses rarely need spurs while
the thick-skinned may need to be ridden in nothing else.

What kind of progress do they expect to make in 30 days or
60 days or 90 days. (And yes, I do understand each horse
is an individual and may respond differently, but a plan
you can sort of follow along with is important to me.)

Just a "few" I thought of. Both trainers I've ever used
appreciated owners who were interested in the process and
encouraged participation by me. I think that is the most
important thing to me personally. I've got friends whose
horror stories with trainers include rumors from boarders
that the horse was not worked/ridden but a couple days per
week and one gal told me that the trainer she took her
horse to would not allow her to come watch as he didn't
want his training "secrets" to be available to the
competition. Can we say Red Flag!!?

heidi





--- "geckogal85@xxxxxxxxx" wrote:

Hello,
I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions about what
questions you ask a trainer. Usually, you find out about
a trainer or one that is advertising and you call them.
What questions do you ask over the phone to decide if it
is worth your time to have a meeting in person.


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Subscribe/Unsubscribe http://www.endurance.net/ridecamp/logon.asp

Ride Long and Ride Safe!!

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=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

Ridecamp is a service of Endurance Net, http://www.endurance.net.
Information, Policy, Disclaimer: http://www.endurance.net/Ridecamp
Subscribe/Unsubscribe http://www.endurance.net/ridecamp/logon.asp

Ride Long and Ride Safe!!

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Replies
Re: [RC] Questions For Trainers, geckogal85@xxxxxxxxx
Re: [RC] Questions For Trainers, Quentin & Libby Llop
Re: [RC] Questions For Trainers, Beth Walker