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Training Mythunderstandings
Breaking Vs. Training
by Ron Meredith President, Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre
--Many people who are training horses will ask them questions that the horse has no way of
understanding or answering. Then they will fight with the horse or hold him hostage until
the horse either gives in or gives up. The so-called trainer walks away feeling like he or
she has won the game because the horse finally did what they wanted him to do. But no
actual communication took place. What happened was "breaking" not training.
When you break a horse rather than train it, you get
a trained flea. What do I mean by that? Well, you start training fleas by putting them in
a jar. You know they are going to jump and if they do that, they'll jump out of the jar.
So you put a lid on the jar.
Now when the fleas jump, they hit their heads on the
lid. Being smart fleas, they learn not to jump so high. Now you can take the lid off and
they won't jump out. Voila! You have trained your fleas not to jump so high. That is
exactly what you do when you "break" a horse.
A lot of people train horses this way. They condition
the horse to random tasks one by one. They do not do it in a systematic way that is
logical to the horse.
Remember that horses have very simple minds. They can
only connect a cause-and-effect sequence of about two steps. To be horse logical, the next
thing you teach a horse can never be more than one step away from the thing you just
taught him and not more than two steps away from the thing before that.
It should be easy for the horse to understand how to
do the next thing you want to teach him because it should flow naturally from the last
thing he learned. It should be horse logical for him to behave in a certain pattern. He
shouldn't have to guess about what you want until he accidentally gets it right. He
shouldn't have to stress himself mentally or physically until he learns to do the
"correct" thing by avoiding the "incorrect" thing.
At Meredith Manor we teach our horses a
"language" based on their body position relative to ours. The horse first learns
on the ground that certain body language on our part calls for him to be in a certain
position relative to our own. With this as a basis for understanding, we gradually shift
the concepts of mirroring the trainer and working in a corridor of aids from ground work
to under saddle work and eventually to whatever game we ultimately want the horse to play.
Horse showing is a game a lot of people like to play
with their horses. Someone defines some rules, prescribes a set of mannerisms, and the
guys whose horses come the closest to those prescribed mannerisms are the winners. When it
gets too easy to win, the somebodies change the rules so it takes something different to
win the game. And everybody's off again. Horse show rules are no more logical than the
rules we make up for football or basketball. They're all just artificial rules that can
get changed at any time.
We teach our horses to perform according to these
prescribed mannerisms to make them competitive at the horse show game. When you are
training, it is important to remember that producing a prescribed mannerism should not be
your highest goal. The way you mentally and physically gymnasticize the horse is the real
game. The horse show mannerisms are only a way for you to demonstrate that you and your
horse are physically and mentally prepared.
If you've only learned to duplicate the mannerisms,
you and your horse are going to be left behind when the somebodies change the rules. If
your horse was properly trained, horselogically gymnasticized both mentally and
physically, you'll be able to adjust to the new game rules.
As your horse's trainer, you mentally take command of
the horse's muscle and strength and use it to play whatever the game you want to play with
your horse. Whether it's polo, cutting, reining, jumping, pole bending, barrel racing or
whatever other game you're playing, the real game is the interaction between you and the
horse. It is about mental, not physical control. And that control has to be methodical and
horse logical for you and the horse to play the game as well as you can.
Training horses is about developing the horse's
mental attitudes to the point where they enjoy playing the same games that you do. That
means taking mental control of your horse. The controlling factor is not strength, not
size, not speed. The horse is ten times stronger, bigger and faster than we are.
Let other people be the ones who jerk on horses and
slap them around or hassle them until they've "learned" something. You want to
be the one who can communicate with the horse using horse logical emotions, horse logical
shapes and change them from what they aren't into what they can be by using what they are
to start with. Training is about what to do rather than about what not to do.
© 2000 Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre.
All rights reserved.
Instructor and trainer Ron
Meredith has refined his "horse logical" methods for communicating with
equines for over 30 years as president of Meredith
Manor International Equestrian Centre, an ACCET accredited equestrian educational
institution.
Rt. 1 Box 66
Waverly, WV 26184
(800)679-2603
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