Training Tip of the Week: Don’t let your foal get pushy.

 

Letting foals get pushy and dominant is the biggest mistake I see people make with young horses. Someone will raise a foal in their backyard and treat him like a big dog. That’s all well and good when the foal is little. When he rears up, nibbles your clothes, kicks out or squeals and runs away, it’s all kind of cute. That behavior soon turns into being dangerous when he’s 500 pounds and eventually 1,000 pounds. That’s when the owner shows up at a tour and says, “My horse bites me and attacks me. What should I do?” The answer is the same thing they should have done with the horse when he was a foal – move his feet forwards, backwards, left and right, but now that the horse is an adult, they have their work cut out for them.

If you gain the foal’s respect when he’s young, he’ll never have a chance to develop those bad behaviors. He’ll never learn that it’s OK to bite, kick or run away from you. I like that people get their foals quiet, I just don’t like when they try to turn them into lap dogs with no respect for human beings. Because in that situation, it’s not if you’re going to get hurt, it’s just a matter of when and how bad.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1205_02

2 years ago

Clinton Learns How to Train Buffalo

The December No Worries Club download features Clinton working with Duncan Steele-Park and Glen Aspinall for a final time to…

Read More
0130_04

8 years ago

Meet Wrangler

We welcomed Wrangler to the world on January 16th. The colt is by Tinker With Guns out of Hail of…

Read More

14 years ago

Training Tip of the Week: Hard-to-catch horse tip: Use the halter as a desensitizing tool.

  Most horses balk at the sight of their owner coming to the pasture with halter in hand because more…

Read More
1105_01-1

2 years ago

Clinton’s Dirt-Road Training Series

The November No Worries Club exclusive features the first training session in a multi-part series in which Clinton throws it…

Read More