RE: [RC] [RC] [RC] Parelli (and other clinicians)-BAD BEHAVIOR - Jim HollandAbsolutely...and one other thing...when you ask a horse to do something, be pretty darn sure he WILL do it, and have in mind what the "right" answer is. Whether you "ask" by pressure or "ask" by whopping him on the butt with a lead line, when you get the right answer, release the pressure and go back to what you were doing without holding a grudge. Correct instantly, reward for the "right" behavior, and continue to apply "pressure" (what that pressure is depends on the horse) for the "wrong" behavior until you get the "right" answer. Training methods that abuse or punish the horse without giving him the opportunity to understand what it is you want or providinghim with a "right" answer are a pet peeve of mine! Horses learn VERY quickly that it is MUCH easier to go along with the program! <grin> In an established herd environment, you NEVER see much more aggression than "laid back ears". However, once you establish that position, you MUST enforce it...EVERY time you interact....because every time you are in the presence of your horse, you are training...whether you think so or not. Jim, Sun of Dimanche+, and Mahada Magic Richard T. "Jim" Holland Three Creeks Farm 175 Hells Hollow Drive Blue Ridge, Ga 30513 (706) 258-2830 www.threecreeksarabians.com Callsign KI4BEN ________________________________________ From: Maryanne Gabbani [mailto:msgabbani@xxxxxxxxx] Sent: Saturday, August 25, 2007 4:35 PM To: Jim Holland Subject: Re: [RC] [RC] Parelli (and other clinicians)-BAD BEHAVIOR You got it Jim. I have about 16 horses right now and have been training them for the past 20 years...granted, very hit or miss at first. I used the same theory with the horses that I used with my kids: 1. It's easier to deal with a thinking being, so teach them to think. 2. What's cute in a baby, sure as hell isn't necessarily cute as an adult...prune behaviours that are going? to be liabilities later. 3. Correct mistakes immediately when it's clear that you are correcting a particular behaviour. Later on it could be interpreted as just aggression. but that said, every horse is different and each is trained differently. My cranky, independent, run-for-the-horizon in the desert 22 yr old mare was my 8 to 12 yr old son's favourite horse until one day she slipped in the sand and he suffered a broken back. She probably saved his mobility by standing stock still as Nadim lay with his hand clenched on the reins and then walked quietly out of the desert with him. There were no jeeps or mobile phones in the area then. She's now the favourite lesson horse to a number of roughly 8 year old girls, all of whom love her. In her heyday, most of my experienced riding friends blanched at the thought of a ride on Dory. Maryanne On 8/25/07, Jim Holland <lanconn@xxxxxxx> wrote: A =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- 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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