the_jersey_lilly_2000
Well-known member
Put your horse on drive lines before ever gettin on one?
katrina said:Ditto..... Not only that! You never know when you might want to go for a buggy ride..... Oh Lordy the worst runaway I was ever on was with two very broke well mannered saddle horses...... It's one of my dad's and I's favorite stories........ Maybe it was the fact that I had a broken arm at the time or............ the fact that my mom yelled out the door that we shouldn't be going for a buggy ride...... :twisted: :roll:![]()
DISCLAIMER: I sure don't mean to dispute any big name trainer's!!!!!JF Ranch said:I use drive lines on mine but after a lot of other ground work has been done. It is a great exercise in my opinion.
I like the modern methods such as what you see from Clinton Anderson but I've never seen him advocate driving a horse. In his round penning, he always expects the horse to turn to the inside, towards him, never away from him. This is to gain respect and to get them to "catch" you instead of you "catching" them. This is important and I use this philosophy in my ground work.
However, when driving a horse it is necessary to turn them away from you against the pen. I don't see a conflict because by this time I am training them to turn, stop and backup as you would if you were on top of them. By the time I get on, they already know these things.
In my opinion, the important thing is to handle them a lot. It doesn't matter so much what you do, as long as you are working with them and getting them accustomed to many different things.
Driving is just one more tool that makes sense to me.
I would totaly back this trainer up on driveing one you don't know.....people don't alway's tell the truth when they send a horse to a trainerthe_jersey_lilly_2000 said:JF...this is what I"m talking about. She does it with every horse that comes to her place....whether they are "said" to be broke or not. She just thinks it's helps them...plus it helps her get to know what the horse knows...and doesn't know.