So glad you thought so. You might also be interested in this video I made about how to stop your horse with just your voice (without saying whoa): ua-cam.com/video/df-C3QzzG3Q/v-deo.html
People and dogs are really good at voice commands. Because of this it is almost impossible for most people to accept that horses are not good at voice commands. I have never seen a horse respond to voice alone in any significant way. This horse is responding to her whip and her body language. The voice is superfluous.
So, HOW did you train your horse to do this. Surely it must be more than voice but also showing them physically what you want - like raising and/or lowering your whip, blocking movement...???
I have see your video about how to stop horse using sound, everytime that horse follow your command and stop you give him treat right..so for trot and canter, do i must run with the horse to give treat to make they understand? Like i said trot and the horse trot, when he trot how do i give him treat to make sure he understands?
No, only give a treat when the horse stops when you use the “trill” sound. When you want your horse to trot for instance, enunciate the word clearly and when you want the horse to go faster, make your voice higher at the end. Example: trrrrrrrOT!! When the horse trots, leave him alone until he makes a mistake again and then tell him again. Your absence of “pressure” coming from your body language, voice, swishing of your whip, etc is the reward in this case. Excellent question! Thank you for watching my videos!
@@DeannaThompsonCorby thanks, i understand it but just a bit..can you also make a video tutorial when he walk or trot treat them by release pressure and give pressure when they make mistakes?it will make people that new to horse will understand such as my self..thanks for your help 😊
@@gerrycoleman7290 I guess we will agree to disagree. 😁 There are many roads that lead to Rome and as long as the horse is physically and mentally happy, understanding and making progress, one way is not better than the other way.
@@gerrycoleman7290 yep, you’re right! I’m just curious though... why are you watching educational videos that teach people how to utilize voice commands while working with horses? You clearly have your own method of doing things... 🙂
Beautiful horse so well mannered and smart. Super helpful for my two shetlands!
Having trouble with a disrespectful yearling colt, your advice, training and tips are being put into practice thank you
Truly helpful information!!! Thank you!!!
So glad you thought so. You might also be interested in this video I made about how to stop your horse with just your voice (without saying whoa): ua-cam.com/video/df-C3QzzG3Q/v-deo.html
People and dogs are really good at voice commands. Because of this it is almost impossible for most people to accept that horses are not good at voice commands. I have never seen a horse respond to voice alone in any significant way. This horse is responding to her whip and her body language. The voice is superfluous.
I LOVE THIS!
*_Great video! I like it_*
Impressive
So, HOW did you train your horse to do this. Surely it must be more than voice but also showing them physically what you want - like raising and/or lowering your whip, blocking movement...???
I have see your video about how to stop horse using sound, everytime that horse follow your command and stop you give him treat right..so for trot and canter, do i must run with the horse to give treat to make they understand? Like i said trot and the horse trot, when he trot how do i give him treat to make sure he understands?
No, only give a treat when the horse stops when you use the “trill” sound. When you want your horse to trot for instance, enunciate the word clearly and when you want the horse to go faster, make your voice higher at the end. Example: trrrrrrrOT!! When the horse trots, leave him alone until he makes a mistake again and then tell him again. Your absence of “pressure” coming from your body language, voice, swishing of your whip, etc is the reward in this case.
Excellent question! Thank you for watching my videos!
@@DeannaThompsonCorby thanks, i understand it but just a bit..can you also make a video tutorial when he walk or trot treat them by release pressure and give pressure when they make mistakes?it will make people that new to horse will understand such as my self..thanks for your help 😊
Syafiq Asraf I will put that on my to do list! Thank you for the idea! ❤️
@@DeannaThompsonCorby I'm the one who should thanks to you 😊
A good horseman uses the horse's language (body language), not voice.
A good horseman can use both. 😉
@@DeannaThompsonCorby Only in very limited amounts.
@@gerrycoleman7290 I guess we will agree to disagree. 😁 There are many roads that lead to Rome and as long as the horse is physically and mentally happy, understanding and making progress, one way is not better than the other way.
@@DeannaThompsonCorby It, of course, depends. If one uses to much voice, it will mean nothing to the horse, and the horse will tune the person out.
@@gerrycoleman7290 yep, you’re right! I’m just curious though... why are you watching educational videos that teach people how to utilize voice commands while working with horses? You clearly have your own method of doing things... 🙂