JMW Horsemanship

JMW Horsemanship I am a horse trainer with emphasis on groundwork to improve the overall horse.
(2)

One of the most important things I try to teach people... That and to remember to watch your horse because they do have ...
07/09/2022

One of the most important things I try to teach people... That and to remember to watch your horse because they do have emotions and feelings, and it's our job to teach them emotional fitness, not just train them to do what we want.

Anthropomorphism

It is the scourge of the horse world, and the single biggest road block I see to educating people.

Whether it be attaching human values to equine behavior with descriptions like:
Work ethic
Stubborn
Holding a grudge
Faking it
Trying to get out of work

And so on

Or, in the guise of being ethical training, we treat the horse as a human child.

A horse is a horse- not a human, not a dog. A horse will never be anything but a horse, never capable of thinking outside of the bounds of horse thinking.

To me, this doesn’t detract at all from the magic of being with horses. We shouldn’t need to make them like a child or a dog or some mystical creature that doesn’t exist to fully appreciate them- they are amazing exactly as they are, and anthropomorphism, whether in positive description or negative description, is absolutely a disrespect to an incredible animal.

If you love horses, learn how they think, learn what they need, and watch how they behave- and drop the anthropomorphism like you’d drop a hot plate- because it does nothing but damage.

04/08/2022

THE MISTAKES WE OFTEN DO BEFORE WE EVEN SIT IN THE SADDLE…

The value of training during handling (leading, feeding, brushing…) a horse and ground work before riding is often underestimated. Whether you are aware of it or not, every minute you spend with your horse you are teaching and training. The horse does not differentiate between “we are in the arena now so this must be training” and “we are in the paddock or at the stable now, so this is where I can do what I want”.

Training starts with the first eye contact when you meet your horse in the paddock and it ends with the release into the paddock after work – whether your horse continues to improve, whether it keeps learning and becoming an even better equine partner or whether it develops unwanted behavior is your choice. And as long as you are not aware of what you teach and show by handling your horse chances are situations will become worse rather than better.
Making mistakes as such is not a bad thing, it is how we (and our horses!) learn, so we should appreciate and work on them.

BE AWARE OF HOW YOU LEAD YOUR HORSE
Many problems can be created or solved already by the way you lead your horse.
The horse should not push or run into you, step on your feet or run into your heels. Old school teaching the leading position to be always so that the horse’s head is in shoulder height of the leader can lead to problems when e.g. you go through a narrow path where space does not allow enough room to walk next to each other. Besides, some horses prefer to walk behind the leader and in my eyes that’s perfectly alright as long as they don’t push.
You are leading the way not the horse, don’t let yourself being pulled and dragged where the horse wants to go. It is important that the horse pays attention to you, where you are and where you want to go – this is especially important in case the horse gets a freight to ensure it won’t jump into you.
Do not hold the lead rope close to the horse’s head but about 1-1.5m away from the halter ring and allow it to hang loose. If you hold the rope to short and tight, your position will be too close to the horse and really invite it to come too close and push. Pressure creates counter-pressure and horses instinctively tend lean into pressure. Often horses will be much calmer when not every tiny movement is controlled by the leader’s hand!

BEING INATTENTIVE
This is a common mistake I fall victim to myself very often But shouldn’t we be aware of our body language and the horse’s movements at all times just as much as we expect the horse to “behave” and pay us attention at all times – especially with young horses and those undergoing re-training where good behavior is not fully established?
Especially when meeting with friends and going quickly to the paddock to fetch, brush, saddle the horse it happens that the mind is focused more on the chit chat than on the animal. And when we are inattentive mistakes sneak in. We don’t realize the horse is a bit more pushy than it should be and whilst keeping up the chat with the friend we instinctively step out of the way and we pull on the lead rather than using our training methods when it stops to have a bite of the inviting green grass on the way to the stable .

BEING INCONSEQUENT
Reacting to the same behavior the same each and every time means predictability, reliability and fairness to your horse.
You simply can’t afford to allow one thing one day when your mind is focused on something else and then punish your horse harshly for the same behavior tomorrow – your horse won’t understand but quickly lose trust in you and won’t accept you as reliable leader.
Establish rules and stick to them, on a good day as well as on days when might feel stressed, upset or tired. Don’t accept your horse rubbing its forehead on your shoulder as a cute expression of “I love you” whilst pushing it angrily away on another day.

BEING PATIENT
Lack of patience unfortunately often turns into spontaneous, even violent action – “what, the horse doesn’t want to go there? Nothing a whip or spurs or a deftly pull on the lead rope can’t fix” Most of the times the horse will remember this situation as being stressful on top of the object it might have been fearful of in the first place and chances are, next time if won’t even go close to it.
Most issues are resolved much easier – and faster in the end too – by working patiently with the horse to overcome an issue and praise each small step into the right direction.

BEING IN A HURRY
You know today it has to be quick, you just arrived and know you will have to leave the stable in half an hour, but the horse needs exercise, so hop on for a quick ride..
DON’T DO IT !!! It is predictably not going to be a good session!
Being in a hurry leads to stress, lack of concentration, wrong body language, lacking patience and it is much easier to lose your temper. What about taking your horse for a short walk instead, sit somewhere and have it graze, give it a good brush – it will help you and your horse relax and can turn into a valuable bonding time.

WARMING UP

Doing it right you spend an appropriate amount of time to properly warm up your horse in walk and trot, bending and stretching before asking strenuous exercise. But what about yourself? Getting on the horse with stiff hips and legs and tense shoulders won’t get you far. How do you expect to stay in soft and flexible contact with legs, seat and hands if you are stiff as a broomstick? Spending 10-15 minutes to warm up and stretch your muscles before riding might bear surprising results for you in the following ride Check the facebook group “Equine Sports – Exercises for Horses and Riders” if you are after ideas

YOU DON’T USE A MOUNTING BLOCK
Pulling yourself up on the horse means tremendous forces on the horse’s most vulnerable spine. Especially if like most of us you always mount from the same side of the horse. It does not matter whether you use a specially designed mounting block, an old milk crate, a tree stump or a chair – it just should be high enough so you can easily reach the stirrup and get into the saddle quick (not with a big blob though!!! But sitting down softly) without pulling on the saddle, mane, reins etc.
Don’t worry about being ridiculed using a mounting block or –aid ! Your horse’s health and wellbeing should be more important to you than the opinion of others who obviously don’t care.

www.sonovetequinetherapy.com.au

04/04/2022

- Another Important Public Service Announcement -

How you tie a rope halter matters! Tying a rope halter is easy, but it's important to do it correctly. A mistied knot might tighten under pressure, making it impossible to untie in an emergency. To tie a rope halter, bring the crownpiece under and through the eye in the cheekpiece from behind. Pass the crownpiece to the right and then bring it under the eye, pointing left. Now just pull it back to the right through the loop you've created and pull it snug. The end of the will be pointing away from the horse's eye (to the right) when you finish.

02/09/2022

Hi guys! I have bought a Pivo to take videos with and was wondering if anyone would be interested in subscribing to a Patreon page if I started making horse training videos.

Highly recommend Capo custom saddles. My saddle is wonderful to ride in and fits every horse I put it on.
09/14/2021

Highly recommend Capo custom saddles. My saddle is wonderful to ride in and fits every horse I put it on.

Did you know we accept payments? Deposits on custom orders are $750 and you have the option to make interest-free payments while your dream saddle is being built! We have a limit on orders we take per month, so message us soon!
www.CapoCustomSaddles.com





06/07/2021

All horses deserve our respect. I've earned over 6 million dollars on a lot of different types of athletes. Through that experience I've learned that each horse is "truly an individual"– honestly, no two are alike, so I can't expect them to learn or show at their best if I don't adapt to their individual needs. When our teaching and expectations are in line with the unique characteristics of each horse... that's respect. –af

Address

Swanzey, NH

Telephone

+16039959406

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when JMW Horsemanship posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to JMW Horsemanship:

Share

Category


Other Swanzey pet stores & pet services

Show All