Thank you, I havet tried to use your videos to re school a 8 year old trotting horse, and we hav progress. I love to work my cattle by horseback, and like your gentle way, both fore horse and cattle. I am Norwegian.
Excellent tuition, thank you. I must say, one the best things you said in a different video about not getting in a hurry and having 5 years to get the horse finished at 10 and having a great riding horse for another 10 years did wonders for my mental stress with my horses. I have a 5 and 3 yr old horses and was always stressed that I wasn’t getting them ridden, I am a contractor and very busy, so a lot of times I am just fried when I get home and feel bad I didn’t ride, I always spend some time with them everyday and it is always positive. Thanks again, excellent content on your you tube channel. Cheers, Geoff, Columbia Falls, Montana
Howdy Mr Pat , thank you for the respect you show to the Spanish and Mexican vaqueros , they are the root of western horsemenship and you are the true living legacy.
Another great lesson. Very time I watch you I learn more about horses and what I do and how it effects the horse. Breathing such a simple thing but it can be a signal to the horse if used correctly. I never would have thought that.
Thank you for gathering the wisdom of horsemanship. This series has inspired me to follow your steps with chinaco one with a colt of my own. Thank you for introducing me to Dave Stamey! Been listening to him for months now. Looking forward to this Florida way. You both are precious gems pido a Dio para la salud de lo do.
Very practical training, not rushed and yet no dilly dallying. Your horse obviously knows your voice and you know his as well. This is a superb video “, step by step.
One great thing I get from Pat & Deb's videos is the new ideas for playing with our horses on the ground. Our 2 geldings are both doing will side passing along a fence and side passing in the open corral, but they are getting a little bored with the exercises. After watching this video, I will start teaching them to side pass along a log while I stand in front of them. Thanks for the videos.
Pat a great breakdown of the topic. On the exhale. I use that on the Kelpie🇦🇺 pup I give my parents. Now I just lower my shoulder and exhale prior to attaching a lead and she sits and lowers her head n relaxes.
Doyle was at the grand opening at my Cowboy Camp Obstacle Trail Park in central Florida. He's great! Gave me that CD too. Great stuff! Love cowboy culture.
Thanks for the explanation about tying the rope to the skinny end of the pole. That seemed backwards to me but I should have known you have a reason for what you do! Denver, CO.
I live in California. Smoke has been terrible in the Central Valley. Be careful Pat & Deb with inhaling that smoke. Looks nasty out there as well. I appreciate all your videos. God Bless...stay safe and healthy
That horse would have figured it out 25X faster with carrots. My ancestors had a big ranch up on the 'Grapevine' & owned at least part of where LA is now. They called it 'Pueblo de Los Angeles' & lived in adobe houses. i have handwritten accounts of their exploits doing just what you described, they only exported what could be shipped around the 'Horn' namely, tallow & hides, maybe some grain. They made riatas & captured grizzly bears. Los Angeles was a mixture of Mexican & Every other nationality after the gold rush & was a nice town but there were outlaw gangs that threatened them also. Very interestng history. Nice knowing my ancestors were horsemen also.
Is there a sequence in your ground training like 1 video, 2cd ect. Up to western bit I figure you kinda have a set way of training were you build on what has been taught I really like the way you teach horses an was watching one of your videos an realized we have not incorporated side passing into our ground work we always did that later .
You can also do a search of Pat Puckett and Chinaco which will bring up more videos. Just look at the dates to get the timeframe as UA-cam doesn’t seem to always put them in order.
From Alberta, Canada. I know my question is off the subject of training, but wondering how you would treat a horse with a an abscess in his foot due to bruising on the sole. Stay safe and thanks.
Pat. I hope you see this message. I have learned so much from you. Thank you. Furthermore, I have a questions as to why someone would want to get a stallion? Mis amigos mexicanos aman a los Garañones? Why?
I so appreciate being able to see how Pat uses his rope, his hands, his position and his breath. Thanks so much!
Thank you, I havet tried to use your videos to re school a 8 year old trotting horse, and we hav progress. I love to work my cattle by horseback, and like your gentle way, both fore horse and cattle. I am Norwegian.
Excellent tuition, thank you. I must say, one the best things you said in a different video about not getting in a hurry and having 5 years to get the horse finished at 10 and having a great riding horse for another 10 years did wonders for my mental stress with my horses. I have a 5 and 3 yr old horses and was always stressed that I wasn’t getting them ridden, I am a contractor and very busy, so a lot of times I am just fried when I get home and feel bad I didn’t ride, I always spend some time with them everyday and it is always positive. Thanks again, excellent content on your you tube channel. Cheers, Geoff, Columbia Falls, Montana
Howdy Mr Pat , thank you for the respect you show to the Spanish and Mexican vaqueros , they are the root of western horsemenship and you are the true living legacy.
You explain training by accessing the horse's mind better than anyone I've ever seen. What an eye-opener. Thank you.
Another great lesson. Very time I watch you I learn more about horses and what I do and how it effects the horse. Breathing such a simple thing but it can be a signal to the horse if used correctly. I never would have thought that.
Thank you for gathering the wisdom of horsemanship. This series has inspired me to follow your steps with chinaco one with a colt of my own. Thank you for introducing me to Dave Stamey! Been listening to him for months now. Looking forward to this Florida way. You both are precious gems pido a Dio para la salud de lo do.
How'd it go
@mihakabercic4457 going great for me. God has saw it fit that I work ranching mostly giving guided trail rides. Still love dave stamey
@@thomasalicea8877 amen to that
Very practical training, not rushed and yet no dilly dallying.
Your horse obviously knows your voice and you know his as well.
This is a superb video “, step by step.
One great thing I get from Pat & Deb's videos is the new ideas for playing with our horses on the ground. Our 2 geldings are both doing will side passing along a fence and side passing in the open corral, but they are getting a little bored with the exercises. After watching this video, I will start teaching them to side pass along a log while I stand in front of them. Thanks for the videos.
Pat a great breakdown of the topic. On the exhale. I use that on the Kelpie🇦🇺 pup I give my parents. Now I just lower my shoulder and exhale prior to attaching a lead and she sits and lowers her head n relaxes.
All this information and history resonates in my soul.
I thank you from Kings River Nevada
Thanks for talking about our Florida heritage! Btw Thankyou for the bit, DVDs and all these free you tube videos I am training my 7 yr old OTTB with.
"Do not turn it into a drill". Thank you sir for this clarification!
Doyle was at the grand opening at my Cowboy Camp Obstacle Trail Park in central Florida. He's great! Gave me that CD too. Great stuff! Love cowboy culture.
Great channel & love your video!
Love your training style! Thankyou for such informative videos!
Happy trails from Canada.
I Realy appreciate the teaching or Pat he is a great mentor Thank a lot.
Thanks for the explanation about tying the rope to the skinny end of the pole. That seemed backwards to me but I should have known you have a reason for what you do! Denver, CO.
I live in California. Smoke has been terrible in the Central Valley. Be careful Pat & Deb with inhaling that smoke. Looks nasty out there as well. I appreciate all your videos. God Bless...stay safe and healthy
Thanks for showing concerns down my way with the huricane
Thanks for sharing and take care. 👍
That horse would have figured it out 25X faster with carrots. My ancestors had a big ranch up on the 'Grapevine' & owned at least part of where LA is now. They called it 'Pueblo de Los Angeles' & lived in adobe houses. i have handwritten accounts of their exploits doing just what you described, they only exported what could be shipped around the 'Horn' namely, tallow & hides, maybe some grain. They made riatas & captured grizzly bears. Los Angeles was a mixture of Mexican & Every other nationality after the gold rush & was a nice town but there were outlaw gangs that threatened them also. Very interestng history. Nice knowing my ancestors were horsemen also.
Thank you
Thank you
Thank you
I live in southern Louisiana I would love to be a part of your quest for knowledge of the river road and Gulfcoast Cowboys.
Is there a sequence in your ground training like 1 video, 2cd ect. Up to western bit I figure you kinda have a set way of training were you build on what has been taught I really like the way you teach horses an was watching one of your videos an realized we have not incorporated side passing into our ground work we always did that later .
We have a groundwork dvd on our website that shows the sequence of groundwork we teach.
@@PatnDebPuckett Thanks I will be ordering that soon
Thank you for that video, was attempt to doing it n the saddle- WRONG- I will do it with the logs/ground work!
Hello, just found your videos and have been enjoying what you teach. Can you tell me if there is a way I can watch all the Chinaco videos in order?
ua-cam.com/play/PLqolZu7D-bMMdARnpbtdDvrpdyc932e4y.html
You can also do a search of Pat Puckett and Chinaco which will bring up more videos. Just look at the dates to get the timeframe as UA-cam doesn’t seem to always put them in order.
I love this.
The other morning this week at 5:00 am were three of you saddling up and mounting up including a lady?
Central time?
Very interesting.
From Alberta, Canada. I know my question is off the subject of training, but wondering how you would treat a horse with a an abscess in his foot due to bruising on the sole. Stay safe and thanks.
Pull the shoe. Fill the hoof cavity with ichthammol drawing salve. Nail on a shoe and pad. Go back to work.
Pat. I hope you see this message. I have learned so much from you. Thank you. Furthermore, I have a questions as to why someone would want to get a stallion? Mis amigos mexicanos aman a los Garañones? Why?
It’s a cultural thing.
Another great video Pat and Deb.., love the lessons in history mixed in with the horsemanship learning. Stay safe and well in that dry country.
I really like Captain Obvious, because sometimes I am Miss Blind Eye :-)
Ahhh, he wants a pet