Lauren's Horse Musings

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Mobster Respect

Desire for. Demand for.

I demand respect. You can demand a lot o....

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Hold On-Rough Ride

Hold on, this could be a rough ride.Roped, tied up, thrown down (some l....

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Bareback for Colt Starting

Ahhh... guess what? If you're bareback on a youngster, especially with j....

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Cross-tied dervish!

If you have some lameness issues or other factors (like it's 115 degrees....

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"The Artist" silent movie

Have you seen "The Artist"? I was amazed at how much was conveyed withou....

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Butt, butt, butt!

Does your horse shoot you the moon when you approach? When you open the ....

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Into the Burning Building

If I told you to go into a burning building... would you? If I shoved yo....

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Love Your Horse?

This is the first part of one of the books I'm working on.

There....

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Ready for the Unexpected??

If your horse spun or bolted or more likely both, would you be able to h....

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THE HORSE whisperer

THE HORSE whisperer

New horses in training get to learn how to j....

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Go Bareback Reason #1

Balance - Exceptional riding isn't holding on with your legs. It's balan....

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Buttercup rears at the gate! Question

Hi Lauren, I enjoy reading your blog. Question do you have anything on a....

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#%&*# Spooking

There sure are a lot of squirrely horses out there. Trouble for us is, i....

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Epiphany

Epiphany

So I’m reading “Racinet Explains Baucher”. I was ....

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An Un-Spooky Horse

What does an Un-spooky horse look like? And what does an Un-spooky horse....

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Trouble

I got some news today that hit me really hard. A really nice 3 year old ....

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Weeds in Your Horse Garden

Weeds - those little things that pop up. Those little things that if the....

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Tobi

Tobi is a 6 year old, bay,....

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Curbside Service Q & A

From a woman in Michigan: I'm really enjoying your newsletters. Que....

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Good Horses!

I wasn't sure whether to call this Good Horses or The Help of the Herd. ....

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Puzzle Pieces

Don't try to make your horse put the puzzle pieces together without givi....

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What's Really Going On?

Awareness is a funny thing - especially if you aren't...aware. Just to g....

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Balky, Balky I Ain't Goin'

Stops dead in his tracks. Just won't go. Nope. Ears pinned. Planted. May....

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Bridling

Sometimes, okay frequently, I get emails that go like this: "My horse wo....

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More Collection Thoughts

What if, from the horse's viewpoint, what we call collection and how we go ....

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Thoughts on Collection

Thoughts on Collection

One of the reasons I called....

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Training Tip Dangers

Read one of Clinton's Tip o' the Week the other day. Now, I'm a Clinton ....

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To Get Ideas FOR Your Horse, Get Inspired BY Your Horse

We humans can be a pretty aggressive bunch. We go out to ride our horse ....

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Holes in Your Horse's Training

Of Course!... Everybody has them.

But... are you leaving them/av....

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The "C" word

COLLECTION - This will certainly be an on-going topic. I'll probably wri....

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Acceptable answers to Pressure

Just so you all know, when I write about something, it's not just you I'....

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Better Curbside Service

There is a difference in how your horse Curbsides. Do you know what it i....

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Lookin' for a Little Help

Hey Folks, There are so many irons in my fire, I'd like to have some inp....

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How Do You View Your Horsemanship?

Albert Bandura wote:

<....

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Ride Like the Wind

Is it just me? I don't get why people worry about riding their horse whe....

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Spurs instead of leg

Have you noticed that if you ask someone why they wear spurs, you get on....

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Show Mentality???

Safety, Training, Thinking

So, I'm at the show chatting with some folk....

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Show Mentality

I was doing a demonstration at the hunter/jumper show at Del Mar the oth....

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Horseman Material

Those of you coming over from the August newsletter… it’s below this....

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Halt at X... Well, sort of

Halt at X… well, sort of. Picture this: The monstrous European warmblo....

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High Jumper

Well, I really like how this horse looks. He’s attentive, sharp, nice....

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A Cinch-y Horse

I was kinda torn about the subject matter as SO many good topics came up....

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Summer Precision

Well kids, in my recent newsletter I suggested some tasks to improve ....

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BLAME

Whose fault is it?

In a nutshell… Yours! What is so ding-dang ....

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Training Youngsters

Many people think it’s important to let a horse be for the first 2-....

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FUSCILING

My word. Yes, I love to invent words. Fusciling (verb)- some combinat....

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Can You ...

Can you/do you stand, with your feet sort of in front of your horse....

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Learning Curve

Sorry I’ve lapsed in writing.

Horses learn immediately from their m....

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The ONE Answer

This is the City Slickers deal with Curly. Remember how he would hold u....

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Spooking

SPOOKING Again! And this won’t be the last time!Oddly enough, many....

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Bridling

Sometimes, okay frequently, I get emails that go like this: "My horse won't take the bit. I know he has before because the people I got him from rode him. What should I do?"

Sometimes I'm at a show or barn and I watch, in amusement, as people try to bridle their horse. It's particularly amusing when the horse is really tall. Yes, I'm easy!

I had a student years ago, who worked at a high-end dressage stable. They had a 17 hand dressage horse for sale for $20,000. It took about six people and 30 minutes to get a bridle on this horse and one of them had to be on a step ladder while the other five held, pushed, pulled and generally tried to keep the horse in the vicinity of the ladder so the person up there could reach the horse's head when it was at it's highest. Now aside from the six people involved, is there anyone out there who doesn't think this is hilarious, not to mention ridiculous? I offered to fix it in one session, but they declined.

Let's do some MATH! Let's say you're the trainer and paying the bills for the barn help. Six people times thirty minutes is 3 hours of labor. Let's just say that you're really fair in how you pay your barn help and you pay them $10/hour. Hmm.... it's going to cost you $30 every time that horse gets bridled. Well... I can see that it wouldn't be worth it to fix the problem. How could that amount to anything. OF COURSE, I'm being facetious.

Now from the horse's perspective, why in the heck should he take the bit??? If he can garner a ton of points and have fun at your expense as a bonus??? Why should he?

The problem here is the perception of the task. It's not really about the horse having a bridle on. It's about the horse being okay/good with keeping his head at torso level while he opens his mouth and takes the bit when you put it in front of him. So... if you're planning on improving your horse's technique, improve yours by NOT putting the bit in his mouth and NOT going ahead with anything if the head isn't at torso level and slightly bent to the left toward you. Just wait! Re-place head with request to stay, either with a hand, touch on the halter, under the jaw or the headstall. Then wait again. If you re-place the head every time it moves out of position, horse will get the idea that you're going to persist and it would be easier to just go along with you.

Then, when they take the bit and you slip the headstall on, a little morsel of a treat and they'll be grabbing that bit as soon as you even get it near them.

 

More Collection Thoughts

What if, from the horse's viewpoint, what we call collection and how we go about getting it, was nothing but pressure and force?
 

Thoughts on Collection

Thoughts on Collection

One of the reasons I called this article 'Thoughts on Collection' is because using reins, legs, seat, spurs, bits, and whips should come WAY after you think about it. Instead of hauling horse's head in & then driving the hindquarters with seat, legs, etc., what if you approached it from the opposite direction?

It would just warm the cockles of my heart if you just stopped reading right here and thought about what that might mean. What IS the other direction? What would that entail? How would I go about that? Why would I want to?

I know some of you aren't interested in whether or not my heart cockles are warmed, but to get this far, you probably at least passed those questions across your mind while you read them. I would love it if you wrote your thoughts in the comments box. Don't be shy. Everyone, myself included, benefits from the open exchange.

 

Okay, okay, but this is all for you. Critical thinking.

Could you start with seeing how little ask, pressure and for how short a time you possibly could? While having horse's head in a frame is  probably YOUR desired result, forget about it. That isn't where we're going just now. Flour isn't a cake, but it takes flour to make the cake. And forget about using ANY 'go' aids. Forget it! A much ignored tenet of classical dressage is "hands, no leg, leg, no hands". Uh? Ponder that! Anyway - back at the ranch, ASK ever so lightly. Ever so lightly! For horse to give his head just a 'bob'. Do it once, maybe twice and then casually walk off like you just saw a cactus wren in a Saguaro. And by that I mean completely NOT focused on horse.

 

Then, casually as you're walking along, ask again, lightly, and walk off, distracted, again. Mosey about and ask again, LIGHTLY. Still, you're not going for any frame or time in position here, just a response. The reason...

 
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Solving People’s Horse Problems and Horse’s People Problems

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LAUREN WOODARD Scottsdale, AZ 480.951.1546
lauren@exceptionalhorsemanship.com

 

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