Tying Up a Young Horse
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- Опубліковано 13 січ 2020
- Warwick discusses how he works on tying up a young horse, by showing that he never asks the horse to do something it doesn't already know how to do.
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4:14 "sorry, sweetheart" love his calm and friendly voice and nature towards her and the proud chicken laying the egg :D :D
I'm so used to the horse people I've been around all my life having such a "bully them" attitude about horses that honestly seeing him be so patient and gentle and understanding with them makes me weepy. It hurts that the typical standard you see around horse people is "its okay to be mean because theyre big".
I completely agree. I'm a very soft-spoken person and often have trouble trying to work or train my own way, THIS type of way, because I'm so self conscious that others around me will think my methods are ignorant and "babying" and I'm "doing it wrong". I just have to get better at sticking to my guns I guess and not being ashamed of doing something the way I find to be best for me to do it.
Agreed! Sadly still such a common attitude
"I need to know the answer before you ask the question"
Holy. It's amazing how much groundwork actually helps. This is extremely helpful and beautiful to see!!
Love the content and perspective!
Absolutely stellar
Amazing content. I always learn from you.
Yes, gently and kind....lovely
Excellent example of feeling the lead and following Thank you Thank you
Awesome. I have a 2 year old. And I want to set him up for success in tying up. This was so helpful
I really appreciate these videos, thank you for the work you are doing!
great video... short and very informative... especially what your horse should know before trying to tie him up.
I have myself very reactive horse, very athletic and very "go go go"
but my level of experteese is not Warwick's. this video made me realized where I'm making mistakes.
Good lesson! Love hearing the chickens in the background. Good for sensory work on the horses.
That was very interesting! thankyou.. she is a little similar to my boy but not done alot of tying up as not the fencing for it .. but this was very helpful ..Thankyou.. So interesting her nose stayed to pressure..
thanks for this video - i just shared it to a FB post - where they showed a horse pulling so hard she was almost sitting on her butt - I of course had to comment that what they were doing was an "stupod way to try to teach a horse to tie" - which of course went over about as good as nails on a chalk board lol - one comment was I didnt offer a different way so I shared your video - ots The Best way - prepare a horse and etc - some people shouldn't be allowed to own animals or kids!!! Thanks for this great video and Perfect technique! as always
Hello, this has to be one of my favorite videos has helped my tying up program with both older and younger horses ,so important that your horse ties up with confidence, love watching these videos ,they are helping me to become a better horsewoman !
#journeyon20
I’ve worked in the Thoroughbred industry in Australia for 40+years, handled yearling & used the QH method with every horse I handled. So buyers of these yearling both trainers, breakers & owners were surprised on how responsive they were & how easily they broke in.
I was told by an experienced horseman that I needed to tie my young filly to a post and let her "teach herself" to tie. My gut said no...I took it slow, made sure she would stand calmly with all kinds of stuff going on around her and yield to pressure on the halter before tying her. (I have seen some nasty wrecks with mature horses that were tied all the time without incident, but suddenly pulled back when something scared them and hit the end of the rope.)
I thought that was my chicken! I kept going outside to see what was going on. Very helpful video thank you. Looking forward to working with my filly today 😊
I like your style!
Thanks for the video. Where did you get the flag you use?
Thankyou, this was very helpful :)
I like, I like, I like. Thanks Warwick.
Perfect timing! I was just getting to train my own filly to tie! Excellent tips!
Cool.
Were can i find a extendable whip like that?
Is the tune that is played as a theme song to this show is um....:
I would like to know it’s name/Location and perhaps download it myself...
What a clever filly.
She was responsive to pressure of the halter, so she used that in the tie up.
How do you fix the action of pulling back once it happens?
Same process as training it from the start. Make sure all the parts work , then use a blocker tie ring or wrap the rope around the post like I did in here
How do you teach them to go towards things that are suspicious rather than away (2:30)?
One way to do it is with clicker training. The first thing you teach in CT is for the horse to touch a target. Starting with a target stick you can make yourself. Horse touches the target: you click and give him a treat. Now when we're out on the trail or on the street in my neighborhood, if my horse sees something suspicious and stops suddenly, I just ask him to target it. My horse isn't super brave, but if he hears me say the word "target" he knows it's probably safe and relaxes perceptibly and he knows that if he goes over to it and touches it, he'll get a treat.
What a good girl
How long is the lead rope he uses, does anyone know?
Looks like 8-12 feet to me. 10 and 12 foot leads are common for training. I can’t really tell but it looks like a 10 foot. Certainly 8-12
How would you help one that gets nervous when you leave? He responds to the pressure and doesn’t pull or anything but as soon as i’m not there with him (Like i go around the corner and he can no longer see me) he gets worried and kind of paces back and forth
I have this exact issue!
Leave ‘em tied for hours until they are calm. It teaches them patience ❤️
Target practice or clicker training! It’s natural for them to become worried once you leave. Horses are herd animals they don’t like to be alone! It’s about teaching them reassurance. I saw one technique that used a target (in this case it was a tennis ball on the end of a dressage whip) that the trainer had tied up! Every time the horse touched the target she’d click, reward and then back away a little further. And then the horse would touch the target, she’d come back, reward, and then return a little farther back than her previous placement!
@@furriesareweird do not no- this can cause a lot of issues actually that even Warwick addresses in other videos. If your horse decides to pull, or freak out or have a reaction 1. You are not there to deescalate the situation, 2. Your horse can cause damage to their head, neck, pill and nerves. If you train correctly, there will be no need to teaching a horse “patience”. Tying them to the post is a lazy, and outdated technique of training!
hi, can I ask you something or send a video ,I have some special questions about my wild horse.?????
Sure
So Warwick, at this point would you be comfortable hard tying this filly? Maybe not yet, but eventually?
After Id tied her up enough times like this and she didnt have an issue.
Where can I get a flag like the one you have?
We have them on our website
WarwickSchiller perfect! Thank you!
so what would you do if she did pull and walk away then she thinks if i pull back i get freedom
But why would she pull back? She knows how to give to pressure.
Lets for arguements sake say she did start to pull someof that rope through, I'd use my flag and step her forward.
Make the horse think it was his idea
She isn't in rope for 1st time
chapandaz sain he did say at the beginning that he had just tied her for the first time before the video.
I wish he’d show that, and I hope he’s being honest about it.
His point is that he trains them to move away from pressure so that when he ties for first time it is not an issue.
Diane Patt The point was not missed, it’s misleading how he does his videos making it look like he’s actually doing it for the first time.
@@yourbarista4154 If im doing something for the first timein a video I will say so. This was actually the second time she was tied up, the first time was 5 minutes before and didnt look any different
WarwickSchiller then I apologize.