I love this. There's so much respect and consideration for the horse with this approach. Too many equestrians just want to go at it as fast as possible regardless of if it's in the best interest of the horse.
learned a lot from this man , being quiet precise patient, is the way to go , you do t just go at them , especially young ones , brilliant teaching here
we long line slightly to one side so that the horse is not in best position to kick us, regardless of whether we are going left rein or right rein. Never from directly behind. It is still easy to do figure eights, serpentines, and to change direction. But your quiet way of going about it is very nice indeed.
Better to do it a little too slowly, a little less even with patience than to do too much, risk losing his confidence/trust, get him injured, confuse him...But after all, if you want it faster chances are you are a "professional"who knows what they are doing.
Till the other weak I had never had my cob x thurebred long lined or lunginged and dident do the rope on the legs and she just stood thare as if she had done it all her life lol
Nobody mentioned how he leaves his long lines dragging on the floor.....dangerous. regardless. Great work but that detail made me balk. 4 on 5 because of the longe lines dragging ...
Oh yes, I know the going at him and whipping him forward with a bit in his mouth approach when the horse is in kindergarten...drive him forward, he gets tangled in the lines and oops, he flipped over...what a bad horse, he will never learn anything... Horses fault.
I love this. There's so much respect and consideration for the horse with this approach. Too many equestrians just want to go at it as fast as possible regardless of if it's in the best interest of the horse.
you're a gorgeous man whispering to horses.. I respect you
learned a lot from this man , being quiet precise patient, is the way to go , you do t just go at them , especially young ones , brilliant teaching here
Brilliant demo. It would be lovely to see more instructional videos like this !
we long line slightly to one side so that the horse is not in best position to kick us, regardless of whether we are going left rein or right rein. Never from directly behind. It is still easy to do figure eights, serpentines, and to change direction. But your quiet way of going about it is very nice indeed.
Lovely manner, very informative.
Lots of professionals I know could use a little going back to "School" with this guy. I would rather be HIS horse, not theirs.
Better to do it a little too slowly, a little less even with patience than to do too much, risk losing his confidence/trust, get him injured, confuse him...But after all, if you want it faster chances are you are a "professional"who knows what they are doing.
Here is a video of us long reining our welsh section a pony
Just a bit much talking to steady BUT still give it an A... based on how I have seen "Professionals" do, heck A+++ good job. thanks
Till the other weak I had never had my cob x thurebred long lined or lunginged and dident do the rope on the legs and she just stood thare as if she had done it all her life lol
Nobody mentioned how he leaves his long lines dragging on the floor.....dangerous. regardless. Great work but that detail made me balk. 4 on 5 because of the longe lines dragging
...
Your a badass
Oh yes, I know the going at him and whipping him forward with a bit in his mouth approach when the horse is in kindergarten...drive him forward, he gets tangled in the lines and oops, he flipped over...what a bad horse, he will never learn anything... Horses fault.
I don't really see the the point to this video? You tip toe around a horse to much, instead of just going at him.