I'm so glad you show ALL the things that happen, the real stuff - the horse trying to jump out of the pen, the having to run to avoid letting go of the rope, the annoying truth that horses always seem to have a good side and a bad side and the skills taught on one side don't necessarily transfer to the other - all things that people run into every day! Thanks for being confident enough to share these things so that we all can see how you handle them. I have a ton of respect for that! I love your videos! I watch and I think "oh ok , good, glad I'm not the only one" and then I watch you work through it and it gives me the little boost in confidence I need to go out and try it myself.
Hi Emily! Thank You SO Much! One of the kindest comments I've ever seen! I love to be as genuine as possible! I definitely think it helps more people when you show them how it really is! All the best! Daniel
I think you are a natural at working with horses and also an excellent tutor. It's amazing to me how quickly you took this beautiful stallion from being reactive and skittish to a calm and willing partner ready to start his journey as he learns to trust humans for the first time in his life. I think you can make a real name for yourself on YT and maybe even become more well known than a certain Aussie-American we're all familiar with!
Love your videos. Would love to see a series of video following one of these horses all the way through their training. Some people think it is so easy and your video here shows all the work and patience it takes. Would love to see their progress and continue getting your great inside and lessons.
Hi there! Thank you for being part of the channel! Have you seen my 10 days of training with a young horse video? That follows a horse over 10 days. I definitely want to do more videos showing the complete process start to finish great idea! 😊👍🏼
@@HorsePerfect I stayed up half the night watching all your videos. I love your channel, you explain things and demonstrate them in real terms and actions. You work with your horses and I would love to see how you handle things like first saddling and first time mounting. You have a real gift.
Awesome! So glad I found this video! I have some experience starting horses that have been minimally handled, but that was many years ago! I currently have 2 unhandled mares that I have been working on, this video shows I’m on the right track and I learned a lot from it and your other wild horse videos. Glad I found your channel! 😊
So glad you found my channel because I need more awesome people like you! A lot of haters out there 🙃 Wish you all the best with your mares I’m sure you’ll do amazing!
Thank you! All the Glory to God! Yes the first lesson is all about starting the process and later I worked with this horse over many days to get him rideable!
S/o to Johanna July THE FIRST American to train wild mustangs she was so good the US ARMY hired her to train THIER horses!! TO THE REAL HORSEMEN AND COWBOYS ✊🏿💪🏿🇺🇸
Just looked her up and she seems like an amazing person that doesn't get acknowledged enough for what she did 🙌🏼 Very interesting I'm sure I could've learned so much from her!
Im a vet i did tame horses for about 3 times my job is its health because when i want to examine the horse its already tamed and restrained but if i was there i would let the horse know me first and i would give it more time feeding her because she is wild
Great video! This is somewhat where I am with my rescue pony, she has some issues to work through and noticeable trauma so this video and others are so helpful! do you find after ending this day so positively that if you were to work with him again the following day it is like none of this happened?
Thank you! I do find that the training retained from the previous day is minimal but increases exponentially as the training continues. For example day 2 they remember and respond to 20% of what you tried to teach them. Day 10 they retain 95% of the previous day 😊
Well done Daniel! Don't let armchair" trainer" Bill's comments bother you! He is full of shit! Your method is consistent, fair and perfectly safe for a very dangerous endeavor! Save your hands and wear gloves 😋.
"trainer" Bill sounds like a real "horse's ass" ..anyways, enjoying watching your videos and find them fascinating..seems like you have a real natural talent and connection with these horses
Have you ever had a horse you couldn't get the rope off the first day? If this was to happen would you be worried about it getting hurt or do you think it would possibly fall off while the horse is eating? I would like to try this, but don't want to put my horse in danger.
If you have a small enough enclosure where the horse can’t easily outrun you then you should be right to rope him (even in this enclosure I am using it’s a bit big) I’ve never had one I couldn’t get the rope off day one.
I enjoyed watching your video. I have a legitimate question as one who has never done this. At what point do you decide it is enough for one day? Or do you decide he isn’t feeling this today and come back later or the next day?
Hi Rebecca! Glad to hear you enjoyed the video! Typically my training lessons are between 45-60 minutes with healthy adult horses. If I notice the horse getting too tired (excessive sweating or labored breathing) then I can end the lesson early. I’m trying to teach the horses certain things and as soon as he does them better than the day before then I stop 😊
What do you if they will look at you but not move their back legs but instead just bend their neck? How long do you normally expect to work on each discipline before moving to the next ? And how long in one session do you feel is best?Also first steps after getting a halter on? Thank you. Enjoy your methods and videos .
So after you got a halter on him then what? I mean I see you work with him more than then you unhaltered him at the end, so what do you do when you go to work with him the next day? Start all over? Or is this horse now approachable and halterable?
Hi Randi, good question! The next day is different every time depending on the horse. Sometimes they let me halter them in half the time of the first day or less. Sometimes I have to rope them again but it’s much less stressful. Most of the time by day 3 I can easily halter them 😊
I’m not completely against giving treats to horses. What I am against is horses waiting for and expecting treats because that makes them nippy and disrespectful. I do give occasional treats when the horse has done well and is least expecting a treat.
Hey love your videos, my horse now knows how to bow and lay down on cue! Can you (if you have not already) do a video on rooting? My horse roots terribly especially when we are on trail with other horses. He gets competitive, even when I'm in the back, turning him, popping him, asking him to keep moving while turning.. nothing seems to work. He's had this stuck in his head since I've had him.. It gets scary when we are going downhill and he starts trotting/loping and pulling his head down, pushing past horses. How can I fix this?
Hi Kori, I’m so glad that my videos have been useful for you! By “rooting” do you mean your horse sticks his nose out and pushes it forward and downward?
Flex your horse more, like 25 -50 times everytime you work him out also work on your one rein stops at the walk, trot and canter in a controlled environment if you have access. Try a twisted snaffle if you are not already using one and when the horse gets soft move to a smooth. Main thing is consistency and time but if you work on it for 8 to 10 days in a row you should see positive changes. My horse did this he would literally pull it out of my hands when I first brought him home. He liked leaning on the bit also but flexing the crap out of him and one rein stopping him everytime he did it stopped the nonsense.
What do you do if the horse gets through the desensitized, is desensitized to anything touching him anywhere, except an actual human? I've been it with this wild (now gelding) for months! We did get a halter on him once but he still does not want an actual person touching. Especially his face. I touched his cheek awhile ago and I thought he was gonna stomp me! After all that he went back to being defensive even though no one has been rough with him or pushy or pressuring
Hi Lace, interesting question! I have definitely had some horses react similarly. It may be time for a video on this to explain it better! You said no one has been rough with him but the gelding process can be rather traumatic. I wonder if he’s still getting over that?
Hi there, yes this is the very first time I worked with him. As far as I know the only other interaction he had with humans was when he was brought on a truck from the dessert about 400miles away. 😊
@@ceceliapeterson4648 since this video he has been gelded! But he was a very gentle stallion! Most stallions are only dangerous when they get older and he was still young! I’m looking forward to riding him and filming a series of videos following that journey! 😊
In my opinion, you're going to fast. Take it slow n have more patience. You're forcing him to trust you.....respect is critical. 🤔 Just my opinion based on observation. You're good with horses, better than ' most '.....
Hey there! I hear you. I definitely wish I had months to work on each part of the training process. Many times I have deadlines and I have owners that want results faster than would be ideal. In a perfect world I would love to spend more time on each step! 😊🙌🏼
If owners are putting pressure on you to rush the process then they don't know the first thing about working with horses. Rushing the process cutting corners is only going to cause problems later on or could potentially get you injured or killed even
I would think a guy would instead of chasing him all around a huge pen and 'trying' to rope him and make him climb fences would think about putting him in a small enough pen he could maybe get the horse 'thinking' instead of fleeing and coming to you and then rope him where you cna help him. I just think you could have done better by the horse in a smaller pen
I see the appeal of a smaller pen but the issue is none of them are round. If I trapped him in a smaller pen he’d have no option but to fight me and his fight instinct is strong. In a smaller pen he would be trying to escape me sooner and with less space to move he’d get in a corner and try to break through. There’s no perfect way to do it but I don’t think a smaller pen would have changed the outcome much.
@@HorsePerfect I would think a wants to climb out based on the pressure he feels is coming at him eh? I'm not saying you arfe wrong in your approach, maybe just re-think it as an option
Such a harsh way to train these sensitive souls, would rather you do it the longer method, and give him more time...better results in the long run...these horses have already endured so much tramua
All good mate. If I could relive the moment knowing he would try to literally jump a 7 foot fence then I absolutely would have backed off. Kinda sucks but I did at least use the opportunity to rope him and progressed from there.
Wild horses have an average lifespan of 10 years. Domestic/captive horses have an average lifespan of 25-30 years. Wild horses die brutally from minor accidents, starvation, disease, and predation. Captive horses are provided healthy food, routine exercise, vet care, and affection. You're ridiculously sheltered if you think nature is a kinder master. Nature sucks ass. Go see how long you survive with none of the conveniences of modern living.
The options for wild horses are being left to die from starvation and disease in the wild or domestication and a chance at a full life in partnership with humans. I can tell you know very little about horses or animals in general by thinking of wild horses as free. Free from what exactly? Free from living to old age? Free from eating a healthy and consistent diet? Free from a life lived without predators hunting them?
What you doing lad? Just give that a miss, and feed him a piece of bread. Walk away. He's not a wild horse He's been stressed been caught somehow so I can say with true experience, he wasn't really wild. How did you get him? Yes, you said you were doing this more quickly than you would. Well, now you have to get back his trust, and his fears need alleviation from the fast way of getting him haltered Easy on this young lad. No way unless you have helped him beforehand of this video. Good hands and stupidity cos he could have done some damage to you or himself. Nevertheless let's hope he goes to a good human. X
Nahh mate this horse is wild. How the heck am I supposed to work with him if he's in a 1000 hectare field. Someone corralled him into a truck and brought him here. But that doesn't mean he isn't wild. and if you don't think so I'd love to see you try and hug him.
I wouldn't have tried to rope him at that stage. I would have left it where it was and come back the next day or a bit later and try again. You just ruined the trust you built up from him allowing you to get that close to him by roping him.
Hi Hannah, it’s ok to do it differently than I did obviously! If I had much more time I would love to not have to rope him. The thing is when I have a client I have a time crunch, I have to progress a little quicker than I would like to. Also there is a good chance it would take a week or so to actually get that step done which would definitely mean I would lose the client. Overall I haven’t seen an issue with roping because I desensitise the horse to the lead rope right afterwards so the fear is gone after that 👍🏼 hope that makes a bit more sense?
i didn't see at all how he ruined his trust. as a matter of fact he helped the horse learn much quicker that it is better to be tame than it is to be wild and scared.
Just when I was beginning to think you had it going on you pull a bonehead move with a rope that could easily have resulted in the horse hurting itself.. I sugget you back away fron any suggestion that you're an expert.
Move on Bill roping a horse is a very effective way to start a horse and necessary in many situations for the purpose of the video this trainer demonstrated how and explained why this method was being done. Have you ever watched any of the mustang makeover
@@SOCOAMERICANBULLYFARM Apparently we watched different videos. In this one the trainer endangered the horse with his approach to introducing the rope. End of story.
I'm so glad you show ALL the things that happen, the real stuff - the horse trying to jump out of the pen, the having to run to avoid letting go of the rope, the annoying truth that horses always seem to have a good side and a bad side and the skills taught on one side don't necessarily transfer to the other - all things that people run into every day! Thanks for being confident enough to share these things so that we all can see how you handle them. I have a ton of respect for that! I love your videos! I watch and I think "oh ok , good, glad I'm not the only one" and then I watch you work through it and it gives me the little boost in confidence I need to go out and try it myself.
Hi Emily! Thank You SO Much! One of the kindest comments I've ever seen! I love to be as genuine as possible! I definitely think it helps more people when you show them how it really is! All the best! Daniel
Agreed
I think you are a natural at working with horses and also an excellent tutor. It's amazing to me how quickly you took this beautiful stallion from being reactive and skittish to a calm and willing partner ready to start his journey as he learns to trust humans for the first time in his life. I think you can make a real name for yourself on YT and maybe even become more well known than a certain Aussie-American we're all familiar with!
Hi Daniel, thank you for your kind comment! I really appreciate it!
God bless!
Who’s the Aussie-American?😅
Yes who is the aussie American ?
You lessons are short and too the point... very simple and straight... May Almighty bless you and your work!
Thank you so much!
Love your videos. Would love to see a series of video following one of these horses all the way through their training. Some people think it is so easy and your video here shows all the work and patience it takes. Would love to see their progress and continue getting your great inside and lessons.
Hi there! Thank you for being part of the channel! Have you seen my 10 days of training with a young horse video? That follows a horse over 10 days. I definitely want to do more videos showing the complete process start to finish great idea! 😊👍🏼
@@HorsePerfect I stayed up half the night watching all your videos. I love your channel, you explain things and demonstrate them in real terms and actions. You work with your horses and I would love to see how you handle things like first saddling and first time mounting. You have a real gift.
I will try to make those videos soon! Thank you! You are very kind! 😊
EXCELLENT! Well done!
You are one of the best trainers in this world just like Mr Ryan Rose. I've learnt a lot from you even though I saw this video later. Many thanks Sir
Thank you so much! All the Glory to God!
Glad you enjoy the videos thank you for watching!
Awesome! So glad I found this video! I have some experience starting horses that have been minimally handled, but that was many years ago! I currently have 2 unhandled mares that I have been working on, this video shows I’m on the right track and I learned a lot from it and your other wild horse videos. Glad I found your channel! 😊
So glad you found my channel because I need more awesome people like you! A lot of haters out there 🙃
Wish you all the best with your mares I’m sure you’ll do amazing!
Another banger man! Love these videos. Hope to see more! Keep up the good work! What a beautiful horse.
That horse is gorgeous!!!
He really is!
Thanks for sharing!
great gob on that horse! You are helping a lot.
Thank you! 😊
I Love your videos man❤ keep up the good work🙌
Thanks brother. Will do 💪🏼
I envy you dearly for this. What a wonderful thing to do. ❤
😊 thank you
Man, you’ve got a gift! Only one hour and you can tame a wild horse to a halter and not be afraid of you?
Thank you! All the Glory to God!
Yes the first lesson is all about starting the process and later I worked with this horse over many days to get him rideable!
I love your videos you’re the best actor in UA-cam. I love your channel.
Thank you you're so kind! All the Glory To God! 😊🙌🏼
Another great video. Thank you.
Within no time, you did a miracle.
🙌🏼😊
Beautiful stallion and excellent do not try at home instructional video.
Thanks Mate!
That's a good horse!! And trainer!!
Thank you! New videos continuing his training are being filmed now! 🙌🏼
*This is great.*
S/o to Johanna July THE FIRST American to train wild mustangs she was so good the US ARMY hired her to train THIER horses!! TO THE REAL HORSEMEN AND COWBOYS ✊🏿💪🏿🇺🇸
Just looked her up and she seems like an amazing person that doesn't get acknowledged enough for what she did 🙌🏼 Very interesting I'm sure I could've learned so much from her!
Wow one heck of a good job
Thank you very much!
Im a vet i did tame horses for about 3 times my job is its health because when i want to examine the horse its already tamed and restrained but if i was there i would let the horse know me first and i would give it more time feeding her because she is wild
Sometimes using food is the only way but usually the horse ends up only listening to you when you have food 🙃
Beautiful horse..
Greetings from germany . thank you for your Video. very interesting . Good Luck
Hi there, thank you! Greetings!
Great video! This is somewhat where I am with my rescue pony, she has some issues to work through and noticeable trauma so this video and others are so helpful! do you find after ending this day so positively that if you were to work with him again the following day it is like none of this happened?
Thank you!
I do find that the training retained from the previous day is minimal but increases exponentially as the training continues.
For example day 2 they remember and respond to 20% of what you tried to teach them. Day 10 they retain 95% of the previous day 😊
These are great tutorials! thanks
You're very welcome!👍🏼
Well done Daniel! Don't let armchair" trainer" Bill's
comments bother you! He is full of shit! Your method is
consistent, fair and perfectly safe for a very dangerous endeavor! Save your hands and wear gloves 😋.
Hi Carolyn, thank you so much! It’s comments like yours that keep me going!
I will have to get some gloves! 😅
"trainer" Bill sounds like a real "horse's ass" ..anyways, enjoying watching your videos and find them fascinating..seems like you have a real natural talent and connection with these horses
No, I will not channel you crazy
Have you ever had a horse you couldn't get the rope off the first day? If this was to happen would you be worried about it getting hurt or do you think it would possibly fall off while the horse is eating? I would like to try this, but don't want to put my horse in danger.
If you have a small enough enclosure where the horse can’t easily outrun you then you should be right to rope him (even in this enclosure I am using it’s a bit big) I’ve never had one I couldn’t get the rope off day one.
Very cool!
Amazing!!❤
I'll be posting a video of how this works for me.. yet I have a stubborn mare
Thank you! 😊
Great job
Thanks mate!
I enjoyed watching your video. I have a legitimate question as one who has never done this. At what point do you decide it is enough for one day? Or do you decide he isn’t feeling this today and come back later or the next day?
Hi Rebecca! Glad to hear you enjoyed the video! Typically my training lessons are between 45-60 minutes with healthy adult horses. If I notice the horse getting too tired (excessive sweating or labored breathing) then I can end the lesson early. I’m trying to teach the horses certain things and as soon as he does them better than the day before then I stop 😊
What do you if they will look at you but not move their back legs but instead just bend their neck? How long do you normally expect to work on each discipline before moving to the next ? And how long in one session do you feel is best?Also first steps after getting a halter on? Thank you. Enjoy your methods and videos .
Thank You Bro
No problem!
nice taming
Thanks!
Superb horse
Love the videos. Where do the wild horses come from?
Hey Joseph! Thanks man! The wild horses on my channel so far come from a desert called Chaco in Northern Paraguay!
How you tack this horse to at your ranch 🤔 ?? Can you tell me that process ?
This horse was loaded on a large truck through a cattle chute and driven 8 hours to the ranch and then offloaded into the ranch pens.
@@HorsePerfect can you make video on it ??
So after you got a halter on him then what? I mean I see you work with him more than then you unhaltered him at the end, so what do you do when you go to work with him the next day? Start all over? Or is this horse now approachable and halterable?
Hi Randi, good question!
The next day is different every time depending on the horse. Sometimes they let me halter them in half the time of the first day or less. Sometimes I have to rope them again but it’s much less stressful. Most of the time by day 3 I can easily halter them 😊
Love from India man ✨
Makes me want to go buy a yearling or y mustang and start working ❤😅
Haha yeah it’s such a rewarding process! 🙌🏼
you sound like Boaster's american cousin lol. Great vid btw
You think so? No idea who that is haha
"Why don't you give food to them as a reward?"
I’m not completely against giving treats to horses. What I am against is horses waiting for and expecting treats because that makes them nippy and disrespectful.
I do give occasional treats when the horse has done well and is least expecting a treat.
Hey love your videos, my horse now knows how to bow and lay down on cue! Can you (if you have not already) do a video on rooting? My horse roots terribly especially when we are on trail with other horses. He gets competitive, even when I'm in the back, turning him, popping him, asking him to keep moving while turning.. nothing seems to work. He's had this stuck in his head since I've had him.. It gets scary when we are going downhill and he starts trotting/loping and pulling his head down, pushing past horses. How can I fix this?
Hi Kori, I’m so glad that my videos have been useful for you! By “rooting” do you mean your horse sticks his nose out and pushes it forward and downward?
@@HorsePerfect Yes he throws his head down and sometimes he will keep it down and try to go faster
Flex your horse more, like 25 -50 times everytime you work him out also work on your one rein stops at the walk, trot and canter in a controlled environment if you have access. Try a twisted snaffle if you are not already using one and when the horse gets soft move to a smooth. Main thing is consistency and time but if you work on it for 8 to 10 days in a row you should see positive changes. My horse did this he would literally pull it out of my hands when I first brought him home. He liked leaning on the bit also but flexing the crap out of him and one rein stopping him everytime he did it stopped the nonsense.
What do you do if the horse gets through the desensitized, is desensitized to anything touching him anywhere, except an actual human? I've been it with this wild (now gelding) for months! We did get a halter on him once but he still does not want an actual person touching. Especially his face. I touched his cheek awhile ago and I thought he was gonna stomp me! After all that he went back to being defensive even though no one has been rough with him or pushy or pressuring
Hi Lace, interesting question!
I have definitely had some horses react similarly. It may be time for a video on this to explain it better! You said no one has been rough with him but the gelding process can be rather traumatic. I wonder if he’s still getting over that?
so wonderful beautiful video friend i love it see so nice
Good job
Thank you!
New subscriber!
Yay! Thank you! 🎉 Welcome!
Where is this horse now?
(-25.3172659, -56.6561489)
Funny Horse🐎🐎🐎🐎🐎🤣🤣🤣
Is this the very first time you’re ever working with him and anybody has?
Hi there, yes this is the very first time I worked with him. As far as I know the only other interaction he had with humans was when he was brought on a truck from the dessert about 400miles away. 😊
I think that horse is beautiful. Is he going to be for sale?
Thank you! Maybe in the future when I finish training him!
Is he going to be gelded? I just love him but most stallions are dangerous.
@@ceceliapeterson4648 since this video he has been gelded! But he was a very gentle stallion! Most stallions are only dangerous when they get older and he was still young! I’m looking forward to riding him and filming a series of videos following that journey! 😊
@@HorsePerfectnoooooooo
@@ceceliapeterson4648why would you suggest that?
In my opinion, you're going to fast. Take it slow n have more patience. You're forcing him to trust you.....respect is critical. 🤔
Just my opinion based on observation.
You're good with horses, better than ' most '.....
Hey there! I hear you. I definitely wish I had months to work on each part of the training process. Many times I have deadlines and I have owners that want results faster than would be ideal. In a perfect world I would love to spend more time on each step! 😊🙌🏼
If owners are putting pressure on you to rush the process then they don't know the first thing about working with horses. Rushing the process cutting corners is only going to cause problems later on or could potentially get you injured or killed even
Brodar love your vidio
And trening start my Indian horse
Best of luck! 🙌🏼thank you!
Why don’t you use a smaller pen?
You can! Sometimes a larger pen gives a wilder horse more space to move and can avoid them trying to jump out as much as a small pen.
I would think a guy would instead of chasing him all around a huge pen and 'trying' to rope him and make him climb fences would think about putting him in a small enough pen he could maybe get the horse 'thinking' instead of fleeing and coming to you and then rope him where you cna help him. I just think you could have done better by the horse in a smaller pen
I see the appeal of a smaller pen but the issue is none of them are round. If I trapped him in a smaller pen he’d have no option but to fight me and his fight instinct is strong. In a smaller pen he would be trying to escape me sooner and with less space to move he’d get in a corner and try to break through. There’s no perfect way to do it but I don’t think a smaller pen would have changed the outcome much.
@@HorsePerfect I would think a wants to climb out based on the pressure he feels is coming at him eh? I'm not saying you arfe wrong in your approach, maybe just re-think it as an option
@@GerryCoxHorsemanship yes absolutely! Just difficult to think of a better way to do it without stressing him out. And still getting him caught.
12 days ago I should fix that
Please builds a center wooden pole into the center of the corral and then you can breaks him down slowly ok thankyous ❤😊
Yea that’s not a bad idea!
Looks like the pinto stallion from Steens Creek off Mustang Meg, who was rounded up and sold by the BLM?
That’s interesting! He’s definitely a looker.
Such a harsh way to train these sensitive souls, would rather you do it the longer method, and give him more time...better results in the long run...these horses have already endured so much tramua
this man helped the horse learn much quicker that it is better to be tame than it is to be wild and scared.
You lost me with fence climbing rope job. Should have backed off. Just my thoughts
All good mate. If I could relive the moment knowing he would try to literally jump a 7 foot fence then I absolutely would have backed off. Kinda sucks but I did at least use the opportunity to rope him and progressed from there.
I'm tired of seeing horses' freedom taken away. There are millions who are in captivity and even so they enslave the few who are free😢😢😢
Wild horses have an average lifespan of 10 years. Domestic/captive horses have an average lifespan of 25-30 years. Wild horses die brutally from minor accidents, starvation, disease, and predation. Captive horses are provided healthy food, routine exercise, vet care, and affection.
You're ridiculously sheltered if you think nature is a kinder master. Nature sucks ass. Go see how long you survive with none of the conveniences of modern living.
The options for wild horses are being left to die from starvation and disease in the wild or domestication and a chance at a full life in partnership with humans. I can tell you know very little about horses or animals in general by thinking of wild horses as free. Free from what exactly? Free from living to old age? Free from eating a healthy and consistent diet? Free from a life lived without predators hunting them?
I don't understand the need for competing background music. Is this a music video or a training video?
I’ve had several similar comments! More of my newer videos have no music after the intro 👍🏼😊
What you doing lad? Just give that a miss, and feed him a piece of bread. Walk away. He's not a wild horse He's been stressed been caught somehow so I can say with true experience, he wasn't really wild. How did you get him? Yes, you said you were doing this more quickly than you would. Well, now you have to get back his trust, and his fears need alleviation from the fast way of getting him haltered Easy on this young lad. No way unless you have helped him beforehand of this video. Good hands and stupidity cos he could have done some damage to you or himself. Nevertheless let's hope he goes to a good human. X
Nahh mate this horse is wild. How the heck am I supposed to work with him if he's in a 1000 hectare field. Someone corralled him into a truck and brought him here. But that doesn't mean he isn't wild. and if you don't think so I'd love to see you try and hug him.
I wouldn't have tried to rope him at that stage. I would have left it where it was and come back the next day or a bit later and try again. You just ruined the trust you built up from him allowing you to get that close to him by roping him.
Hi Hannah, it’s ok to do it differently than I did obviously! If I had much more time I would love to not have to rope him. The thing is when I have a client I have a time crunch, I have to progress a little quicker than I would like to. Also there is a good chance it would take a week or so to actually get that step done which would definitely mean I would lose the client. Overall I haven’t seen an issue with roping because I desensitise the horse to the lead rope right afterwards so the fear is gone after that 👍🏼 hope that makes a bit more sense?
i didn't see at all how he ruined his trust. as a matter of fact he helped the horse learn much quicker that it is better to be tame than it is to be wild and scared.
𝐩𝓻Ỗ𝓂Ø𝓈M
Just when I was beginning to think you had it going on you pull a bonehead move with a rope that could easily have resulted in the horse hurting itself.. I sugget you back away fron any suggestion that you're an expert.
I guess you didn’t even read the video title 😅
@@HorsePerfect That's your excuse for scaring that horse, it was wild? I was under the impression the whole idea was ESTABLISHING communication.
Bill Are you a horse trainer?
Move on Bill roping a horse is a very effective way to start a horse and necessary in many situations for the purpose of the video this trainer demonstrated how and explained why this method was being done. Have you ever watched any of the mustang makeover
@@SOCOAMERICANBULLYFARM Apparently we watched different videos. In this one the trainer endangered the horse with his approach to introducing the rope. End of story.
Nice job.
Thank you! Cheers!