Training Tip: Make Safety a Priority When Saddling a Colt

0818_Tip

When it comes to saddling a colt for the first time, I always assume the colt is going to break in two. I would say that 50 percent of colts buck the first time they’re saddled and 50 percent don’t. It’s almost impossible to tell which colts will buck and which ones won’t. Sometimes the spookiest, most reactive colts won’t even think about bucking, while the ones that are dead quiet and bombproof will buck their hearts out.

The safest approach is to assume every colt will buck and to take the necessary precautions so you’re not caught off guard. How the first few saddling sessions go sets the stage for the rest of a horse’s career. Remember, when you do something to a horse for the first time, you plant a seed. When you do it again, it becomes a habit. When you do it for a third time, it becomes an ingrained habit. If it’s a good thing, it’s a good habit. If it’s a bad thing, it’s a bad habit. You want to be sure you’re instilling good habits in your horse right from the start.

More News

Back to all news

See All
FILES2f20162f022f0216_04.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

If You Want Something Bad Enough

If you want something bad enough, you’ll find a way. If you don’t, you’ll find an excuse. That’s a quote…

Read More
0909_01

7 months ago

Final Walkabout Tour in the Books

This past weekend in Waterloo, Iowa, we closed the chapter on an incredible era in Downunder Horsemanship’s history with our…

Read More
0829_05

9 years ago

Meet Method Ambassador Tammra Minteer

Method Ambassador Tammra Minteer started her first horse when she was 39. “I did it the old cowboy way, where…

Read More
FILES2f20162f022f0202_03.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

First Tour of the Year a Month Away

A month from now, Big Blue will be pulling out of the Downunder Horsemanship drive and heading east toward Okeechobee,…

Read More