One rein stop. Good safety stop for you, Bad is training for your horse.
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- Опубліковано 13 гру 2024
- The one rein stop is a good safety stop for you but is bad training for your horse. I show you why and give you an alternative that is both safe for you and good for you horse.
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I feel embarrassed to say this but I followed Clinton Anderson for a long time. He seemed very confident and seemed to know exactly what was going on for the horse and how to correct it but over time I felt he was quite aggressive. I beat myself up for what I put my little horse through. I find you helpful. You're methodical, Calm and give thought to everything you do. You don't rush the horse or make it seem like you've got to go gung ho. I'm no one special just interested in what you have to say. Thank you.
Agreed
I agree, too. ❤
I just recently started wondering about one reign stops and if it was more of a reward than a punishment. I have a 5 year old who likes to take to bucking when she gets scared and by no means am I willing to run her through it, but I just recently had a trainer tell me to get her bent around and keep her in a small circle and work her until she is responding to me, and I saw a instant change in her behavior. She was asking me if she could stop instead of me asking her. Great advice and I appreciate the explanation! Not many trainers tell you the WHY behind techniques, just the do.
Hi Tim, the audio is perfect. 25 years a go my western instructeur in the Netherlands teach me the same techniek how you correctly stop your horse; by not lettim him stop but keep walking until i give him the commando to stop. Exactly how you do it😊. His name is Peter Simons, maybe you know him. Greetings from the Netherlands
You all need to train a few horses first before you comment. I teach the one -rein stop immediately to my students, even on a well-trained horse. It has prevented a wreck many times, especially OUTSIDE. Most of the horses that I witness being ridden by others are stiff, stiff, stiff, and can't be turned in a blow-up situation. Turning in a circle accomplishes the same thing, that is, if the horse will turn. 😂
I like Herm Galey too. Nice facility you have. Beautiful
Another penny has dropped! Thank you! My mare, Sunny, drops and exits stage left or stage right depending on where she perceives the threat is emanating from and then she goes into a series of ‘crow hops’. It’s a very effective strategy and she dumped me once doing this maneuver. I left a definite dent in the arena floor dirt. One that my coach said he’ll have to fill up with the front end loader, I might add lol. My go-to is the hard one rein stop and it scares me to think I may hurt her mouth and or her tongue. She has done this about 5 times in the 12 years I’ve had her and I managed to stay on 4 out of those 5. I use one bridle and it’s a long shank (grazing type) snaffle with a curb chain. No injury yet but I know it’s more luck than anything else. I’m not a big strong man so my pull isn’t terribly fierce but I guess it doesn’t take much to hurt a delicate mouth. My quick reaction is because of the ‘crow hopping’ that can easily turn into outright bucking. If she just ran off with me I think I’d be less severe. I do however get right back to work. There’s no standing around and I’ve wondered if that’s a good idea or not. Now I know for sure because what you’re saying makes sense. If I’m paying attention and have her in discipline I can read her body and ride through it. I’ve prevented many possible duck, exit and crow hop episodes just by being in the moment. I generally pay for my day dreamer mentality.
Thank you for giving a shoutout to my dad's channel! We greatly appreciate it!
Kim Gailey-Fitting
You're welcome.
Sound is good thanks. Listening from Scotland 🏴
Wow! Thanks for watching! I bet my southern US accent really sounds funny to you. Lol
@@timandersonhorsetraining The accent is good😊 I hadn't thought of the one rein stop causing this issue but now you've explained it, I can totally see what happens. I will get this in mind for when I need it. Thank you 😊
Hi Tim, the new audio is LOTS better! The "new" one rein slow down makes a lot of sense. I enjoy the way you explain/teach lots of common sense 👍🙆♀️ Hope you have a Great Day!
Laurie🐄
Thank you.
Your audio is perfect!!
What I'm about to share isn't a recommendation by any means. I started riding as a young child and the saddle and stirrups were to large and to long. Taught me great balance and engagement but in a bind I needed a plan B to stop.
My trainer taught me how to hold my reins snug in one hand while grabbing the mane low and mid then sliding off tucking knees under the neck and staring at the horse to stop.
Sounds nuts but it worked balancing on a strong willed horse.
As an adult running out of control on a 1600 lbs it sure beat him running into blasted tree stump craters. At high speed, I found the one rein stop method wanting him to flip, trip and roll. Sitting on a $250k horse I had to think fast to not kill us both. My hands were bloody and thighs bruised trying to stop.
I was only 100lbs wet.
Great story!
I really like this! I have never been a fan of the one rein stop either. This is a great alternative and makes your horse think.
Hi Tim,
Macaroni & Cheese
I love it!
Sound is good,listening from UK
Thank you
EXCELLENT advice ... I'm extremely glad I found your videos & subscribed. You mentioned you live on the Gulf of Mexico; I live IN Mexico, near Guadalajara ... wish you could come to our area to give a clinic. We have a large community of "Expat Gringos" here, who would benefit from your wisdom. Really appreciate what you're doing to help us be better with our horses.
Thanks!
The audio is way better. I love your way of gaining control instead of doing the one rein stop, which I will start doing. Makes a lot of sense! Thank you! :)
Awesome, thank you!
The one rein stop saved my life today
Hi Tim just watch route 66 you tube and they said subscribe to your station, then I realized I have already. Helena Victoria, AUSTRALIA. GOD BLESS and keep safe. xoxo
Cool, thanks!
Great quote - everyone who rides is a horse trainer. I never liked the 1 rein stop because I always felt like the horse could just keep running sideways then we were going flip! The circles are something we did on the ranches because it made more sense to keep the feet moving but in a controlled manner! Great explanation. Thank you.
Thank you
Sound is great
Excellent makes sense. T. Australia
this one is great, much better to hear, even the others vids where not that bad, love your knowledge and advice. I love different training advise to switch it up, as some training methods does not work with some horses. I got a new horse and still try to get used to her and build trust.
You are right. Different training methods are like different tools in your tool box. You want to use the right tool for the job. Thanks for watching
Circle stopping is great if you have the room to do it … in a narrow trail it doesn’t work.
I get that and you take any control you can and this may mean swerving from side to side kind of going to the left side of the trail, the to the right side. Anything to get their brain engaged as much as possible and get you as much control as possible with the area you have available to you safely.
Sounds great
Thank you
I CANT WAIT TO TRY THIS
Audio great so far.
You doing great! Love we can hear you. My family are addicted to your videos!
Thank you
Love your barn!❤❤❤❤❤❤
Brilliant advice and alternative - as usual 😊
Audio is great! I like this technique of training when it comes to a horse running off and getting them to stop 🛑. Do you have any videos of just teaching how to do a regular stop? I have a mare that I am training and she has about 15 rides and her stops still aren’t consistent. I’m trying to get her to realize when my seat feels a certain way she needs to slow down and stop and she’s not caught on yet. 🤦🏻♀️🤷🏻♀️ I have some videos on my UA-cam channel where you can see how she stops. Thank you for your time and help!
Hey. Yes I have a playlist titled steering and stopping. Look in there for the video titled basic training. That should help plus I have some others in that play list that might help. If you don't see anything to help what you're working let me know, might be a good topic for a new video. Thanks for watching.
@@timandersonhorsetraining oh AWESOME! Thank you so so much! I’ll keep you updated 😁
Audio is much better. Also good advice on stopping and training the horse that spooking means work as I am sure we will need that for Harley from time to time or any other horse that might do that.
Yes you are right.
Sounds Great 👍
Thanks
Tim audio sounds perfect. Helena victoria AISTRALIA XOXO
Thanks.
Yeah 1.1k subscription so glad I could help you get that goal
Thank you
Sounds great! 🐎🐴🐎
Thanks
Sounds good to me!❤
Definitely better sound quality!
I understand all you are saying, but what if you are on a trail and there is not any room to circle at all?
100% better
Thanks
The microphone is better, much better than some.
I did most of my riding on gravel roads so a one rein stop wouldn't work for me. The first time my horse got out of control as a 14 yr. old I had no idea what to do. He was at full gallop and I decided to jump off because he wouldn't stop. I took one foot out of the stirrup and was going to jump off when he came to a very fast stop, lucky for me. I had to do that on more than one occasion, and it always worked. I didn't know about a one rein stop anyway.
I can hear you ! Perfect
Thanks
Love this! Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it!
one rein top is a good way to break your neck, it is the same move to drop a movie horse on the ground..... and could very well end up dropping you and your horse too, esp at speed
Audio is much better!
Thank you
I can hear really well. I think this one works weell.
Thanks for all your informative videos. I have two questions. As a trail rider, I have had instances when my horse has bolted on a trail where there is no safe way to circle since there is not enough room. Any advice for those instances? I have used the pulley stop with some success but it is true that it brings the horse to a stop like the one rein stop so it may inadvertently reward the bad behavior. Other question has to do with the horse's lead. When I have had space (during a bolt), I have brought my horse into a circle. One time though, I almost brought my horse down as she was galloping on the opposite lead. Since then I have been hesitant to do the circles unless I know for sure which lead I am on, which sometimes is unclear in the panic of the moment particularly if the horse wasn't cantering before the bolt. Any advice?
I would suggest that you address the reason why your horse bolts instead of reacting to the bolt.
The audio is much better!
That kid must be great if he named the horse Mac and Cheese!!!!
Wow never thot of it that way.😊
👍audio👍
Don’t think you got this right all the way. If a horse bolts or wants to run off, you’re actually inhibiting bad behavior by doing the one rein stop. Making the horse stand still when he wants to run isn’t a release that fosters bad behavior. I’ve done millions of one rein stops, and not once saw it creating bad behavior.
You are riding a dead horse. If you were on a high energy arabian you would need to ride with two hands and use a one rein stop to train because only Arabians have a flexible vertebrae behind the scull. Not using a one rein stop will cause an Arabian to toss his head in the air and hit you in the head. Using a one rein stop from the beginning will never cause him to put his head in the air. When started with a one rein stop my horses know that if they don't stop or slow or turn they will be bent. After two years of using a one rein stop all it takes is a feel from the bosal on either side of the nose to communicate what I want. After watching Clinton 30 years ago I have not started or ridden with anything else and have turned out every horse to be collected and obedient with out developing head tossing. I'm sorry you have not caught the vision. It is worth the trouble to learn it.
Just because you got it done that way doesn't mean it couldn't have been better. I train and compete at the highest world level on all breeds including arabians. When you compete against your peers that's when you know how good a job you've done. Without competition there is no desire to improve.
Clinton Anderson hasn't competed in anything of significance and sends his more talented horses off for training.