
16/10/2025
How have you been conditioned to be around horses? đ´
My dad had no involvement with horses in his life until I became interested, he has been around them a little over the years, I even got him on one once (which he hated and got off after 2 minutes of walking đ
). Since I moved the horses home over the last couple of years he has become much more involved in caring for them. What I find so interesting is how he naturally behaves around the horses having not been indoctrinated into the industry at all. His only experiences are working around our settled herd mostly with the horses loose and at liberty. He has not been exposed to chronically stressed horses who arenât having their needs met.
He hasnât done a lot of leading with the horses, because of our setup he used to just bring them in one at a time with no headcollars on with some treats in his pocket and they would all willingly oblige and understand the routine.
Now we are at a place where headcollars are required to take the horses through the farmyard it is interesting to see how different his instincts are when leading to what most of us have conditioned into us. There is absolutely no urge in him to back the horses up, if they pull or veer towards a certain direction he tends to go with them like you would a dog wanting to investigate. What I find the most interesting is that when he is trying to guide or correct them, he is so gentle. He has such a healthy respect for them there is nothing in him that even considers yanking or pulling them harshly or shouting at them. In return the horses are very safe and gentle around him.
I was trying to figure out why it seemed so unusual to me that his instincts werenât to try and dominate and assert himself. Iâve realised its because from the start most of us are told we have to be so firm and perhaps even rough with horses to keep them under control. Its certainly what was around me all of the time when I first started learning about horses.
My dadâs only influence with horses has been me, and these days the way I behave around my horses is very different to years gone by. I rarely âcatchâ them to do anything within their living space, they are comfortable with what we ask of them and therefore safe to be around. They come and go as they please and they associate people with nice things happening.
In the past I was a drill sergeant, my first instinct around any horse was to back them out of my space and chase/shove them away if they tried to engage or happened to step towards me without me asking them to. I didnât even really think about it, its just what I did out of habit. If a horse didnât like something I was doing I would keep doing it until they gave in. My horses didnât enjoy hanging out with me very much and when given the choice would leave as they expected me to hassle them.
I donât really put a lot of importance into âpersonal spaceâ with my horses anymore, sure I ask my horses to move a little if theyâre in the way, but I enter their space sometimes and other times they enter mine, it is no problem. If I donât want them to in that moment I simply quietly ask them not to or I disengage with them, I donât need to push them around and make them stand to attention. When I first meet a horse now I see if they want to engage with me, I donât insist on it and I donât feel entitled to their bodies. This has kept me safer than any of my old âteach the horse to respect youâ training ever did, because the horses feel safe around me and I also donât put them in situations that set them up to fail.
We can absolutely teach boundaries and leading positions without having the horse feel like the space around us is lava and if they dare to slip into it theyâll be met with a flag/stick/rope waved up into their face.
Its interesting how often I meet new clients and they apologise for their horse engaging with them by perhaps nuzzling or nudging them while weâre chatting because theyâve been told by others that it is so rude. I have to explain it is absolutely fine, it is not rude and the horse is just feeling frustrated or anxious, perhaps we step away and stay out of their space while we chat. Weâre all so indoctrinated into thinking any sort of interaction not on our terms is rude and dangerous, its not. It is completely normal for horses to interact with their environment and not stand like robots.
Our habits can be so hard to break, especially when they come from a place of worry about being out of control or hurt, but we canât expect our horses to be relaxed and feel safe around us if every step out of line is met with a harsh correction.
Have a think about this next time youâre leading your horse. How aware are you of what youâre doing? If your horse stops to look at something, do you just pull or do you perhaps yank sharply to get their attention? Could you maybe pause with them and leave slack in the rope and give them a moment? When theyâre ready could you invite them to walk on with you with the gentlest pressure you can and release for one step? Can you recognise when youâre feeling stressed or frustrated around your horse and stop and take a deep breath before you react?
The more consistently gentle and predictable we are around our horses, the safer they will feel around us and the softer and safer they will be to handle. Donât just train for compliance, consider how your horse is feeling always. The more we train with the horseâs emotional state in mind, which means considering the horseâs needs outside of the training too, the less we ever need to âget into itâ with horses.
If you have any stories of becoming softer and changing your perspective with your horses I'd love to hear them. đ´
Pictured is my dad doing some quiet training getting Dan used to going in a stable again after 10 years of living out.