|
Voice Commands for Your Horse
by Mistress Michelle Peters
To start building your confidence, let's make your horse safe by teaching him
some basic voice commands. You need a halter, a lead line with a chain, and
a long whip about 44 inches long. Put the halter on your horse so its noseband
is about 2 inches below his cheekbones, and attach the lead line as follows,
starting on the left side of the head:
-
Thread the snap on the chain downward through the
lower-left ring of the halter.
-
Lift the chain up so it crosses over the noseband of the halter
but doesn't directly press on the horse's face.
-
Feed the chain out and up through the lower-right halter ring.
-
Attach the snap of the chain to the upper-right ring of the halter
-
Make sure the snap is away from your horse's face. If it rubs,
it can come undone.
You will need 4 to 6 inches of chain on the left side to work with.
If you are left with more (the chain is too long), pull the snap
through the upper-right ring and attach it back on the chain.
-
Hold the lead line with your right hand about 8 to 10 inches from the
halter. Layer the excess lead line in your left hand. Never wind the
excess lead around your hand, because you could be injured if your
horse startles and suddenly pulls away.
Before you start these leading lessons, take some time to get
your horse used to the whip. Quietly rub it all over his body
until he stands quietly when he feels it. Once he is comfortable
with the whip, you'll be able to use it as an aid. Carry the whip
in your left hand along with the excess lead line.
When leading your horse, the correct position for your body is just
in front of his shoulder. He should neither be walking too far in
front of you nor dragging behind you. Your goal with this groundwork
is to train your horse to react immediately to simple voice commands
to stop, go, and slow down. Horses learn by association -- so in the
beginning, combine a voice command with three additional cues.
The first cue is the movement of your body. When you want him to
go forward, you start walking. When you want him to slow down, you
slow down. When you want him to stop, you stop. The other two
cues are use of the lead line and the whip. Use the lead line to
help stop him. Depending on where you use it on his body, you can
use the whip to tell him to stop or to move forward.
Begin by going from the halt to the walk: From your position at his
shoulder, take a step forward, reach behind your waist, and touch him
with the whip on his barrel where your leg would rest. As you take a
step and touch him, say, "Walk on," in an energetic voice.
As soon as he walks forward, reward him by praising him with your voice,
or patting him.
Walk forward a few steps and then say, "Whoa,"
or "Ho," in a slow, soothing voice. As you give the verbal cue,
stop walking. If he continues to walk forward, lift the whip in front of
his face. If he still doesn't stop, touch him on the chest with the top
of the whip and apply a take-and-give pressure on his nose with the chain.
If he still walks forward, give a couple of sharp tugs on the chain. As
soon as he stops, praise him with your voice, or pat him. The next stage
is to get a prompt reaction to your voice without the extra cues. Eliminate
the movement of your body as an extra cue first. Try just saying "Walk
on" and "Whoa"; use the whip and the lead rope to help only
if necessary. Don't move or stop until your horse does. When he does this
easily, eliminate the lead and the whip as aids. Ask him to walk forward
and to "whoa" solely from your voice command. When he does, make
a huge fuss over him: Pat him, praise him, and give him a treat.
If he stops reacting promptly to your voice, add one of your additional
cues back in until you get a response. Then go back to just using your
voice again.
Go through these same steps with transitions from walk
to trot and back to walk, as well as halt to trot and back to halt. Your
verbal cue for trotting can be a brisk "Terrrot." Use the added
cues of your body movement, whip, and lead line as needed, but remember
that your ultimate goal is to get your horse to halt, walk, and trot
solely from your voice. Once your horse can halt, walk, and trot
on the lead like this, teach him to slow down within his gait. The
same rules apply: Start by combining a voice command such as "Slow"
or "Steady" with your body movement, the lead line, and the whip.
For example, start with an animated walk. Say "Slow" as you
apply a bit of pressure on his nose and slow down your own walk. If he
doesn't react to these aids, give some sharp tugs on the lead. Once he
slows down, praise him. To return to the animated walk, say "Walk
on" as you touch him on his barrel with the whip and speed up your own
walk.
|