Thanks for watching! If you want like to see more detailed training videos and ask questions about your horse consider joining my Patreon page. Go to www.patreon.com/ryanrosehorsemanship
When my late gelding was a yearling, he was the same way-fiesty, rambunctious, and crazy. He knew how to lead, stand for the farrier, go over tarp, wear saddle pads, stand for the vet, do light round pen work, and being exposed to every day things around the farm. When he was two, I did ride him, but once a week and only at a walk. We trotted 6 months in and didn't canter until he was 3 1/2. He was a quarter horse and had a great brain.
What a gorgeous girl! It's wonderful to see her respond and try to figure out what you want and offer a correct response. Thank you so much for your patience with all these horses! You're an amazing trainer and moving slowly is obviously key.
She is gorgeous and still a baby with a baby brain. They need to learn to be a solid citizen and safe around humans. It is giving them a good foundation to move forward when they are mentally mature. Our 9year old had a rough start when we got him as a 2 year old. Took us 7 years to unlearn all the bad training. My horse who is 17 had no training in ground manners when I got him 8 years ago. It has been a journey!
Ele (not sure I spelled her name correctly) stole the show with her adorableness!! It was hard to follow all that you were saying this time Ryan (I usually hang on every word) because I could not stop admiring Ele's cuteness. She's so beautiful and full of personality and seems really smart! The beginning of the video when she is jumping around made me giggle out loud, as did her sniffing you with her lips curled! She seems very affectionate! Thanks you two for sharing such great content!
❤❤ how's it going Ryan wishing you a happy New Year hope it's a great year for you and your family.. excellent video 📷 as usual love 💕 watching you teaching us I'm a horse woman too worked with them for years hoping to get a new job in February with them you have such a great talent with them I wish I had.. brilliant horseman thank you so much for sharing this 😊 beautiful animal great mover.. lovely colour.. you're so passionate about what you do as am I. You continue to inspire me to keep going. Kind regards for 2025.😊
It's such a great privilege to see you being the best at what you do I could watch you for hours great privilege to work with these wonderful animals. It's the best job I couldn't do anything else.😊 it's a pity you don't live in Ireland I'd like to work with you I'd learn everything I need to know to get into training horses myself I'm not quite there yet.
I have been really focused recently on making my young horse think. It is very very tempting to just lunge him until he's tired as he can be very energetic. But i have only frozen ground so its not even an option. He needs to behave as soon as I pull him out of the pasture! I've been using backing, walking the line, and yields to help him focus up. He's so so good under saddle so I was wondering why after some time off, he was coming out of the pasture almost aggressively and had reverted to nippy colt behavior. If it was summer, I'd just go run him down the road ditch till he was hufffing, then try in hand stuff. But the icy ground has forced me to rethink my methods and really have found great help on Ryan's channel! He's right, I don't want to have to lunge my horse just to get him to calm down enough to handle standing still for grooming. Thanks for making me think!
Thank you for the valuable videos, I have learned a lot that I can apply to my dressage work and am always suggesting your content to my students. I do have a question regarding the canter cue on the longe - I have noticed that you ask for the canter by speeding up the trot. My approach is that I teach them a single-word command for the canter, which later allows me to start the canter from standstill or walk on the longe, without chasing after them. It starts out looking similar to this, but by adding the word command, eventually no additional movement is needed on my side. I'm always a bit worried about their ligaments on a fast trot/canter on the circle, so I prefer a more controlled takeoff to the canter. Somewhat similar methods are practiced by most ppl around here (Eastern Europe). Is this not a used approach in the US?
He did back her off a couple times when she pushed in and mentioned the first time. The 3 or 4 other times she creeped in with her nose stretched out like she was asking or being curious about something. My personal opinion, a horse this young you don't want stop from being curious or politely asking, you want to encourage it. If she started getting pushy instead of polite, that's when the correction is needed.
Actually I don't like seeing the super difficult. I'd rather see things caught before an explosion and set the horse up for things they are prepared to do. Much like the owner I'd rather things were done right by the horse.
A yearling filly should NOT live in a small paddock with one adult horse as company. Nor should it be bandaged. It should live with a herd of other young fillies to grow up. You do NOT lunge a yearling! There is ZERO need to do that and it's harmful for their soft, developing joints and tendons. This is crazy. This horse needs NONE of this. It needs to be able to lead, load on a trailer, stand tied and stand for farrier and vet. And you need to confront it with stuff like cars, dogs and other everyday stuff. That's it. Otherwise it needs to be left the f-- alone, along with it's herd. NO riding prep work needs to be done with a yearling that is not ready to get started for another two years.
Lunging for two seconds like that isn't going to hurt her. I have a 5yr old warmblood that I wish someone worked with like this when he was a yearling because he is so NOT emotionally fit right now that everything is stressful for him, and he would be so much more relaxed and happier now if he understood better what humans want
Wow, get a grip...who says that's where that yearling lives full time? If you look at that one small clip again you can tell she was much younger and it was a different time of year. She's not 'bandaged' those look like shipping boots, maybe she'd just arrived. She may possibly be closer to two years by this point and learning the basics of lunging, how to respond to pressure and respecting space are definitely good ideas. She's going to be a big powerful girl and the sooner she learns some of the human rules the better. Ryan seems to always handle these horses with fairness and compassion. I doubt anyone is asking her to do things that would be harmful to her growth... learning how to lunge a little is not going to hurt her...geez.
Are you just telling us what you were taught and therefore what you always do? Or do you know without a doubt that Ryan is doing it wrong because you've seen the result of yearlings being trained in this way? Basically, do you have evidence that only your advice works and there is no other way?
I don't know if you're new to this channel, but from what I've learned from watching is that Emily is a physical therapist ( I believe for both humans and horses) and Ryan an experienced trainer. I doubt either of them is naive or unaware of what level of activity is suitable at various stages of equine growth.
Thanks for watching! If you want like to see more detailed training videos and ask questions about your horse consider joining my Patreon page. Go to www.patreon.com/ryanrosehorsemanship
When my late gelding was a yearling, he was the same way-fiesty, rambunctious, and crazy. He knew how to lead, stand for the farrier, go over tarp, wear saddle pads, stand for the vet, do light round pen work, and being exposed to every day things around the farm. When he was two, I did ride him, but once a week and only at a walk. We trotted 6 months in and didn't canter until he was 3 1/2. He was a quarter horse and had a great brain.
What a gorgeous girl! It's wonderful to see her respond and try to figure out what you want and offer a correct response. Thank you so much for your patience with all these horses! You're an amazing trainer and moving slowly is obviously key.
Lovely. I'm sure I could see her thinking for a while in the middle of the session. 🙂
Gorgeous girl! Great training makes good horses, starting them young builds their tendons and joints so they stay in good health longer. Great work!😊
She is gorgeous and still a baby with a baby brain. They need to learn to be a solid citizen and safe around humans. It is giving them a good foundation to move forward when they are mentally mature. Our 9year old had a rough start when we got him as a 2 year old. Took us 7 years to unlearn all the bad training. My horse who is 17 had no training in ground manners when I got him 8 years ago. It has been a journey!
What a beautiful horse! She moves like liquid silk💕
Ele (not sure I spelled her name correctly) stole the show with her adorableness!! It was hard to follow all that you were saying this time Ryan (I usually hang on every word) because I could not stop admiring Ele's cuteness. She's so beautiful and full of personality and seems really smart! The beginning of the video when she is jumping around made me giggle out loud, as did her sniffing you with her lips curled! She seems very affectionate! Thanks you two for sharing such great content!
What a lovely filly. Beautiful work with her ❤
❤❤ how's it going Ryan wishing you a happy New Year hope it's a great year for you and your family.. excellent video 📷 as usual love 💕 watching you teaching us I'm a horse woman too worked with them for years hoping to get a new job in February with them you have such a great talent with them I wish I had.. brilliant horseman thank you so much for sharing this 😊 beautiful animal great mover.. lovely colour.. you're so passionate about what you do as am I. You continue to inspire me to keep going. Kind regards for 2025.😊
Really enjoyed this video and this horse's learning!
It's such a great privilege to see you being the best at what you do I could watch you for hours great privilege to work with these wonderful animals. It's the best job I couldn't do anything else.😊 it's a pity you don't live in Ireland I'd like to work with you I'd learn everything I need to know to get into training horses myself I'm not quite there yet.
What a stunning filly.
She moves beautifully.
She is going to be a really nice horse when she's grown.
I lunge with a black PT band with the surcingle above the hock. Agree to the with the yield. This is a great fitness building as he says!! Love this
You can tell that horse really trusts you.
Beautiful, smart girl. Might want to watch her tho Ryan, she's being sneaky about coming in and moving you. 😊
She is adorable!
Wow, she’s so beautiful!!!
I have been really focused recently on making my young horse think. It is very very tempting to just lunge him until he's tired as he can be very energetic. But i have only frozen ground so its not even an option. He needs to behave as soon as I pull him out of the pasture! I've been using backing, walking the line, and yields to help him focus up. He's so so good under saddle so I was wondering why after some time off, he was coming out of the pasture almost aggressively and had reverted to nippy colt behavior. If it was summer, I'd just go run him down the road ditch till he was hufffing, then try in hand stuff. But the icy ground has forced me to rethink my methods and really have found great help on Ryan's channel! He's right, I don't want to have to lunge my horse just to get him to calm down enough to handle standing still for grooming. Thanks for making me think!
I've got my volume all the way up and I have not been able to hear you well for quite a while
How about more Emily videos! A pro with another skill set.
Her black is Beautiful. Shiny❤❤❤❤.
Thank you for the valuable videos, I have learned a lot that I can apply to my dressage work and am always suggesting your content to my students. I do have a question regarding the canter cue on the longe - I have noticed that you ask for the canter by speeding up the trot. My approach is that I teach them a single-word command for the canter, which later allows me to start the canter from standstill or walk on the longe, without chasing after them. It starts out looking similar to this, but by adding the word command, eventually no additional movement is needed on my side. I'm always a bit worried about their ligaments on a fast trot/canter on the circle, so I prefer a more controlled takeoff to the canter. Somewhat similar methods are practiced by most ppl around here (Eastern Europe). Is this not a used approach in the US?
She is pretty 😍
She is cute and jumpie.😂😂😂
Looking great! She is gorgeous!
Curious as to why you’re letting her into your personal space?
He did back her off a couple times when she pushed in and mentioned the first time. The 3 or 4 other times she creeped in with her nose stretched out like she was asking or being curious about something. My personal opinion, a horse this young you don't want stop from being curious or politely asking, you want to encourage it. If she started getting pushy instead of polite, that's when the correction is needed.
10:07 guess she read your mind😊
Omg its a colt like a puppy will someone play with me geeezo come to my house 😆 🤣 😂
She is not relax, she is shutdown. Look at her eyes! She is thoughts inside herself.
Actually I don't like seeing the super difficult. I'd rather see things caught before an explosion and set the horse up for things they are prepared to do. Much like the owner I'd rather things were done right by the horse.
A yearling filly should NOT live in a small paddock with one adult horse as company. Nor should it be bandaged. It should live with a herd of other young fillies to grow up. You do NOT lunge a yearling! There is ZERO need to do that and it's harmful for their soft, developing joints and tendons. This is crazy. This horse needs NONE of this. It needs to be able to lead, load on a trailer, stand tied and stand for farrier and vet. And you need to confront it with stuff like cars, dogs and other everyday stuff. That's it. Otherwise it needs to be left the f-- alone, along with it's herd. NO riding prep work needs to be done with a yearling that is not ready to get started for another two years.
Lunging for two seconds like that isn't going to hurt her. I have a 5yr old warmblood that I wish someone worked with like this when he was a yearling because he is so NOT emotionally fit right now that everything is stressful for him, and he would be so much more relaxed and happier now if he understood better what humans want
Amen😊
Wow, get a grip...who says that's where that yearling lives full time? If you look at that one small clip again you can tell she was much younger and it was a different time of year. She's not 'bandaged' those look like shipping boots, maybe she'd just arrived. She may possibly be closer to two years by this point and learning the basics of lunging, how to respond to pressure and respecting space are definitely good ideas. She's going to be a big powerful girl and the sooner she learns some of the human rules the better. Ryan seems to always handle these horses with fairness and compassion. I doubt anyone is asking her to do things that would be harmful to her growth... learning how to lunge a little is not going to hurt her...geez.
Are you just telling us what you were taught and therefore what you always do? Or do you know without a doubt that Ryan is doing it wrong because you've seen the result of yearlings being trained in this way? Basically, do you have evidence that only your advice works and there is no other way?
I don't know if you're new to this channel, but from what I've learned from watching is that Emily is a physical therapist ( I believe for both humans and horses) and Ryan an experienced trainer. I doubt either of them is naive or unaware of what level of activity is suitable at various stages of equine growth.
You guys are letting her move your feet and invade your space without correcting it.