I have been having problems getting my gelding to circle without pulling back, stopping, turning toward me or at worst trying to kick and/or rear to avoid moving forward for more than 1/2 of a circle. May try this technique to show him that his way is not the easiest way ie. being resistant. Thanks again Pat, just when I was starting to feel like a failure figuring out what makes my horse tick and respond appropriately.
There all different types of horses, some need a very physical performance to make them go, whereas some as sensitive and need little encouragement. It may look bad to some people, but he never actually touches the horse, he just puts on a physical performance so it registers in the horses brain what he wants. My horse is the same, I need to put on a massive show so she's interested. Just because your horse is more sensitive to what you want and doesn't need the performance, it doesn't mean all horses will be the same. The horse isn't actually distressed, he's just picking up on the energy that the man is using. No it isn't 'abuse' because the horse has a choice, and either way, he isn't hurt, it's just one way is much easier than the other one.
Emotional abuse is more what's happening. Thank heavens for trainers like Warwick Schiller who train people to fix all the pent up emotional abuse people like this inflict.
Years later and this is still an amazing video. Simplified and quick. If your horse is doing something wrong, you correct it. How can you do that? Move their feet. Horses, when taught incorrectly will find a way to control you. When you can step ahead and say, "no I have the power." and that power is simply by making them move how you want them to, they realize who's boss. That is what Pat demonstrates here. Move their feet, teach them you're boss, apply pressure and take it off when the horse has done what you've asked. That's how horses learn. 'Pressure and release'. and for those upset that Pat has whipped the horse, he hasnt, and in my experience, if that whip made contact at that force on the horses hind quarters, there would be a kick or a different reaction of some sort. That would inflict so much pain that the horse would decide that fleeing is no longer the option but instead fighting is. That's how horses use self defence 'Fight or flight'. Pat has demonstrated control and has gotten what he wanted, in a simple way, and with no harm.
Morgan I’m not a parelli fan, but everybody is different. All these guys say and teach same thing right thing easy, wrong thing hard. Lots of problems are fixed or prevented by that and controlling and moving horses feet.
Totally unrelated maybe he was gonna say chewing gum but from playing alot of rdr2 swore the other word was gonna be tobacco at 1:36😂 maybe that's a cowboy stereotype 😂
mine does too but i found that if you get it to trot for atleast one second you can get it to stay using steady pressure and even if the horse just trots about 5-10 steps when using steady pressure i would reward it
Parelli tells you to start at whatever gate your horse does. If they want to fast jog around let them, if they want to walk, let them. As long as they keep the gait and don't stop or change direction
Pat was being ASSERTIVE....NOT ABUSIVE. This horse must have had some poor responses which I think would have been good to show first (the ineffective owner was getting nowhere with her technique). Pat had to undo that and show the owner that you need to be assertive without being mean...he didn't hit the horse at all but the horse sure figured it out in a hurry. Now this will be easier to get that response at lower phases from now on. If there was another horse in a pasture that wanted to move a horse and that horse said screw you buddy...what do you think that would have looked like...guarantee it wouldn't have been pretty either. Just saying...
Horses amongst themselves don't have meetings to discuss things democratically. They communicate directly, so there's no misunderstanding. They are physical with each other because they can't talk. Once the horses in the herd know who the leader is, they feel safe. It's as simple as that.
Thank you Lea. It is refreshing to know that there are still good people whose hearts still can feel. The real blindness is not the blindness of the eyes, but is the blindness of the heart.
@@adamzekry3566 pulling a gun on you would also get you to use your natural instincts to hand over your wallet. And no need to even hit you! It's wonderful really.
All this video shows is another human with a hungry ego, hell bent on terrorizing the horse to impose his will. There is no love, no cooperation whatsoever. And the gigling of that thing in the background, makes it even more disgusting. All those heartless and narcissistic horse owners who thumbed up this video, leave horses alone and go get a dog to do things on commend and flatters your ugly ego.
I have been having problems getting my gelding to circle without pulling back, stopping, turning toward me or at worst trying to kick and/or rear to avoid moving forward for more than 1/2 of a circle. May try this technique to show him that his way is not the easiest way ie. being resistant. Thanks again Pat, just when I was starting to feel like a failure figuring out what makes my horse tick and respond appropriately.
F u laura and parelli too.
@@aminabdullah350 Nice to see you're out, Amin, but does your parole officer know you're back online?
Trevor Bailey yes, my parol ofisr iz agreed wid mee
I have this very same issue currently with my gelding so I am also going to try this
There all different types of horses, some need a very physical performance to make them go, whereas some as sensitive and need little encouragement. It may look bad to some people, but he never actually touches the horse, he just puts on a physical performance so it registers in the horses brain what he wants. My horse is the same, I need to put on a massive show so she's interested.
Just because your horse is more sensitive to what you want and doesn't need the performance, it doesn't mean all horses will be the same. The horse isn't actually distressed, he's just picking up on the energy that the man is using.
No it isn't 'abuse' because the horse has a choice, and either way, he isn't hurt, it's just one way is much easier than the other one.
Emotional abuse is more what's happening. Thank heavens for trainers like Warwick Schiller who train people to fix all the pent up emotional abuse people like this inflict.
@@This1LifeWeLive you should look up caroline rider
He actually did touch the horse you can see the string hit the horse in the face
Mister Parelli you Number One
Years later and this is still an amazing video. Simplified and quick. If your horse is doing something wrong, you correct it. How can you do that? Move their feet. Horses, when taught incorrectly will find a way to control you. When you can step ahead and say, "no I have the power." and that power is simply by making them move how you want them to, they realize who's boss. That is what Pat demonstrates here. Move their feet, teach them you're boss, apply pressure and take it off when the horse has done what you've asked. That's how horses learn. 'Pressure and release'.
and for those upset that Pat has whipped the horse, he hasnt, and in my experience, if that whip made contact at that force on the horses hind quarters, there would be a kick or a different reaction of some sort. That would inflict so much pain that the horse would decide that fleeing is no longer the option but instead fighting is. That's how horses use self defence 'Fight or flight'.
Pat has demonstrated control and has gotten what he wanted, in a simple way, and with no harm.
Morgan I’m not a parelli fan, but everybody is different. All these guys say and teach same thing right thing easy, wrong thing hard. Lots of problems are fixed or prevented by that and controlling and moving horses feet.
It's abuse!
@@xhogun8578 ??
My horse would do this every time but when I use the whip she would turn away and pull me to the other side of the field. What should I do?
Not this! Go watch Warwick Schiller, he's got a better understanding of well rounded training.
What a beautiful horse! Wonder what breed? Thanks Pat!
Totally unrelated maybe he was gonna say chewing gum but from playing alot of rdr2 swore the other word was gonna be tobacco at 1:36😂 maybe that's a cowboy stereotype 😂
How do you get the horse to just trot the circle? Mine finds it too difficult to stay in trot.
mine does too but i found that if you get it to trot for atleast one second you can get it to stay using steady pressure and even if the horse just trots about 5-10 steps when using steady pressure i would reward it
Parelli tells you to start at whatever gate your horse does. If they want to fast jog around let them, if they want to walk, let them. As long as they keep the gait and don't stop or change direction
What a desappointment to see Parelli doing that...
Not really what I expect from Pat....
Far too aggressive with the whip coming at her like a typical predator.
Pat was being ASSERTIVE....NOT ABUSIVE. This horse must have had some poor responses which I think would have been good to show first (the ineffective owner was getting nowhere with her technique). Pat had to undo that and show the owner that you need to be assertive without being mean...he didn't hit the horse at all but the horse sure figured it out in a hurry. Now this will be easier to get that response at lower phases from now on. If there was another horse in a pasture that wanted to move a horse and that horse said screw you buddy...what do you think that would have looked like...guarantee it wouldn't have been pretty either. Just saying...
Horses amongst themselves don't have meetings to discuss things democratically. They communicate directly, so there's no misunderstanding. They are physical with each other because they can't talk. Once the horses in the herd know who the leader is, they feel safe. It's as simple as that.
well there ya go
great video!
i love this!
How can you love this?
@@karut6092 How can you not love it? Maybe because you are confused.
@@like2bike979 Because I want my horse to be my partner and not my slave.
Thank you Pat
F u Daisy and everyone like u.
Awesome. I want to do that with Karma. She’s stubborn but I need to go crazy on her
Poor, poor horse.... :(
Lea Schilling oh shut up if you don’t know what he is doing and how his training looks like
@@localabsurdist6661 there are much better ways to train a horse. Watch Warwick Schiller.
Thank you Lea. It is refreshing to know that there are still good people whose hearts still can feel. The real blindness is not the blindness of the eyes, but is the blindness of the heart.
hes not actually hitting the horse, hes using the horses natural instincts to get it to do something
@@adamzekry3566 pulling a gun on you would also get you to use your natural instincts to hand over your wallet. And no need to even hit you! It's wonderful really.
That was nice, I really enjoy watching Pat work with a horse.
Diane Reiser it is so horrible for the horse.
Pool scared horse
All this video shows is another human with a hungry ego, hell bent on terrorizing the horse to impose his will. There is no love, no cooperation whatsoever. And the gigling of that thing in the background, makes it even more disgusting.
All those heartless and narcissistic horse owners who thumbed up this video, leave horses alone and go get a dog to do things on commend and flatters your ugly ego.
I love it.... Me and my girls will be trying this one for sure😎
Why? Do you like hitting your horse?
@@karut6092 He NEVER touched the horse!
@@like2bike979 He pulls the Rope and Hits the Ground hard, agressive and loud. The horse has no choice than to obey.