lol, I am laughing at myself, as I started this video with the preconceived notion of favoring LF, so thank you for walking us through a logical thought process. Much appreciated.
@bridgerkempf44516 жыл бұрын
Oh dear. My horse is broke. And not in a good way. I've created a wet-noodle-necked horse. Under the guidance of a trainer, who told me to flex "a hunnert times if you have to!" This was because, working on a lunge/or just basic groundwork, she was so stiff necked and he recommended I do this lateral flexion often and it will soften her face/neck/thoughts etc. And it has. But now, we can be trotting gaily along and I ask her to turn slightly to avoid a branch, (just for instance) and that pretty nose comes around and she'll keep going straight into said branch. Sigh. Now I know why, and I love the lesson in this video. Now to fix it. Thanks a lot! I think there's a moderation in everything and lateral flexion seems to have been blown way out of proportion. Appreciate the work you do. It helps us regular folks a lot!!
@BravoPerformanceHorses6 жыл бұрын
Ross' incorrect method won't fix that either. Your horse will just swing its hind quarters away from the rein as an automatic response and you'll still hit the branch. And your horse will be at a disadvantage for learning every other maneuver that requires an inside rein cue. You will be better off using all of your proper aids for a turn, even a slight turn to avoid a branch, not just picking up the inside rein. The lateral flexion is a great and correct start, now take your horse to the next level.
@bridgerkempf44516 жыл бұрын
Rancho Bravo Thanks for the input! I appreciate every morsel of knowledge I can get!
@sineadbeel19177 жыл бұрын
well I've since ridden my very green gelding and discovered he has almost no disengage under saddle. I didn't assume this would happen but I think you're right that is was the way I taught LF. Now to undo the mess a bit
@RossJacobs7 жыл бұрын
I'm sure you'll get it sorted out now that you know what you are looking for. Good luck.
@brookshorse18967 жыл бұрын
Thank you Ross. Very informative. I appreciate the effort you put in to these videos.
@RossJacobs7 жыл бұрын
You're welcome Diane. Regards to everyone in Ontario.
@comesahorseman4 жыл бұрын
Lateral flexion is often used to confirm relaxation, if not submission. Seems to me a hindquarter yield to the rein demonstrates cooperation also, especially if they don't lift the head to object. I was also taught to stroke the reins or lead rope to encourage lowering of the head and tension release.
@joanmuller12227 жыл бұрын
From what you demonstrated in this video and what I saw you put into practice in a recent clinic I audited, I understand better about making a connection throughout the whole horse's body. Whether tapping the saddle, cuing the hindlegs, to make the fore and aft linkage. It's helped my mare tremdously in reducing her "cup of worry" and find ease in true forwardness as a by-product. I've always suspected that I was doing too much hind end disengaging (how many programs make that a fix-all for every behavioral problem using it as the difficult thing a horse gets to do until the right thing appears like a better idea in contrast). I began to see that I was making my horse light but not soft and appreciate that my horse called me out on that one. So... now that I'm adjusting myself to notice and support my mare from the thought first, I want to make sure that I can work from the lateral flexion/hindquarters disengagement TO engagement if that makes sense. I'd like to help my mare get herself in better balance and I'm still bothered over my too-successful attempts at disengaging her hindquarters where she stepped to the side of her center of mass and maybe moved the hindquarters over but de-stabilized herself somewhat, too. Right now I feel like I want to improve how she will follow my inside rein not only as a directional thought but also as a "come on with this" energy, be able to fearlessly follow my lead, and in more configurations than only a hindquarters yield. I want to always preserve the through-body-ness I've started to experience; I have a gist that my horse will be my first responder, but I'd be interested how you'd next weave the hindquarters "dis-gagement" into "engagement." As a dressage-trained rider I have a patterned idea on keeping an idea of potential softness and pre-flexion(?) on the inside rein WITHOUT PULLING CRANKING OR TORQUING the front end, in other words having a thought inside and willingness to bring the whole body there. I bet you could suggest some mindsets I might leave at the curb since I want to get over the "take a contact" dogma on the one hand and the "just connect the reins to his feet" on the other. Dogmas. Sit. Stay. What else Ross?
@RossJacobs7 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your comment. With regard to turning the disengagement into an engagement, it first comes from a horse's mind being ready to respond. With that in mind you might think about asking for an engaged forward as your horse comes out of the hhq disengagement. As the inside hind reaches across and under the centre line, ask for forward or a rein back or a forehand yield - anything that says to your horse "be ready, we are about engage your motor." Don't make it predictable so that the horse anticipates your next request, but ask enough so that your horse mentally stays focused and prepared to use itself correctly. I hope that answers your question.
@joanofartifice7 жыл бұрын
Thanks Ross. That's very helpful!! I appreciate your feedback---it follows right from what I was asking.
@cathydee23837 жыл бұрын
I love you Ross Jacobs, ;-) thank you so much, this makes so much more sense!!!
@calvintrewin7 жыл бұрын
Hi Ross, I find this topic really interesting and I can see the real benefits in teaching what you are suggesting. I am however, agonising somewhat over teaching this to my young cutting horse as i am not sure how it would relate to the sport of cow cutting. Often it is necessary to set your horse up by tipping its nose toward the cow with direct rein whilst at the same time using your outside leg (herdside) to hold the hind end. This is to prevent the hind end from yielding too early or inadvertently. This effectively means you want your horse to stop straight i.e. parallel to the cow, but looking at it to maintain a mental connection. I would be interested to hear your thoughts on this scenario. Maybe you teach it to the young horse to get it going be safe and then gradually train it out. I would add that ultimately, trained cutting horses do need to become very sensitive to leg aides and rating your seat. With my horse, the drift you mention is usually prevented with a bit more outside rein close to the neck and little bit more inside leg i.e. more bend around the leg. Falling into the circle is more of problem for me. Anyhow, this is just a thought i had and would be genuinely interested to hear your thoughts. Cheers Calvin
@RossJacobs7 жыл бұрын
Hi Calvin. Thanks for your question. My problem with lateral flexion largely is due to the fact that it is taught to young horses BEFORE they have learned to follow the feel of the inside rein correctly with all 4 feet. This ultimately is the problem. So if your horse has learned to follow the feel of the inside rein correctly, then it is a small matter of adjustment to use the concept to lateral flexion, outside leg or whatever you want to use to direct the hindquarters in a way that helps you horse be a better cutting horse. This is because once the horse has learned to follow the feel of the inside rein to direct the hindquarters it can be applied as needed to ensure the horse maintains balance and straightness. The horse won't unlearn to follow the feel of the inside rein, he'll just other layers of understanding and complexity of aids on top. I hope I am being clear enough. Cheers Ross
@calvintrewin7 жыл бұрын
Thanks Ross, that is crystal clear. You have explained what i was thinking but couldn't quite grasp the mechanics of. In terms of a cutting horse, I think I have been viewing the processes required as countering each other, whereas I can see now that they can be taught as two different processes. To start with, yielding to the feel of the rein and then later on follow the feel of the rein coupled with outside leg means flex to look at the cow but don't yield the hind quarters. This is by the by, but you worked my young horse QH, Rusty, at one of the Wyuna clinics and you took a bit of a shine to him. He's all grown up now starting out on his ridden life. PS i have also just watched your video on straightness the not overdoing the outside rein. It was very good thankyou. I would love to have the opportunity to work with you again one day on some ridden work. Cheers Calvin
@polmarine46987 жыл бұрын
I have a horse looking away from the turn always and he is stiff in the turn, I will definitely will try this like you did in the video, as many times as the horses mind needs..... thanks!
@comesahorseman6 жыл бұрын
Aha. Done your way, you teach a hindquarter yield, not a break @ the poll. Much better all around, thanks!
@aikitbliambanu6 жыл бұрын
Thank you Ross, I always felt there was something wrong about this neck bending exercise we see so often performed everywhere, but just couldn't put it into words. You have explained it so clearly!
@BravoPerformanceHorses6 жыл бұрын
Except that he is completely wrong.
@Harry-ei7os5 жыл бұрын
How would you go about stopping a younger horse that bolts for the first time and you are in a single file situation out on a trail? Just curious. Cheers
@miriamtell50717 жыл бұрын
Dear Ross, thank you so much for all your terrific work, both in person and video. I’m looking fw to tracking you down next summer here in the northland of the US. My only sideways comment on the awesome video horsemanship work, is that the computer generated theme music you’ve chosen is dry, sterile, an uninspiring. But I know you’re a scientist, and scientists are often (usually) left brained and dull about music. So much so, that music either embarrasses or annoys them, is inconsequential, or merely puts them to sleep! (I’m never sure if it’s a compliment or an insult when folks doze off during my song) Unfortunately for me, I’ve come to learn this by working full time in Psychiatry/Neuroscience, and also endeavoring in music. Blending science and art is a brain game, and not unlike horsemanship really. Keep up your great work, see you in 2018, and thanks again!
@pattikarcher15356 жыл бұрын
Thank you for confirming what I thought was wrong teaching. I could see that LF caused confusion in my horse and it was of no value. So a couple of years ago I stopped doing it and now use the reins and have a perfect response from my horse.
@sineadbeel19177 жыл бұрын
I teach LF and disengaging... you can do both but it's useful to be able to flex still as well. It's just a tool
@RossJacobs7 жыл бұрын
What advantage does insisting on the feet not moving offer a young horse that is yet to understand how to follow the feel of the reins? That is the question that I can never get a clear answer on from advocates of LF. In what world does a person ever want to flex the neck and it not connect to the feet. Why is LF useful? A tool for what? What practical purpose does it serve?
@terryspencer59937 жыл бұрын
Kudos to you for not following the mainstream, and for thinking outside the box. My journey has taken me in circles on the topic of LF. I’ll share a few of my beliefs. (I work with going horses, troubled horses, and unhandled horses.) You asked “In what world does a person want to flex the neck and not connect to the feet.” How about cow working?!? Pointing your horse’s nose at the cow carries a lot of meaning. Yes, I need to be able to point his nose (flex the neck) and NOT move the feet OFTEN. Just because you’re not asking the feet to move, doesn’t mean you’re not asking for the horse to adjust his entire posture-lift the base of the neck and shift his weight toward the hind. I start working toward that response 1 rein at a time (LF) and work toward using both reins (soft feel). A lot of folks don’t use a soft feel in a correct, productive way either but, that’s a whole other can of worms. I don’t want my horse to automatically “disengage” the hind every time I ask him to flex. I’m working on ENGAGEment, too! Other reasons LF is useful - to diagnose physical or mental blockages. With quality lateral flexion, you can determine which vertebrae in the neck is stuck, and get it freed up, thereby promoting correct movement. I’m sure you’ve visited with Harry about the importance of ‘head twirling’. In my book, that’s LF, you’re just not asking for the entire neck. Recently, a friend posted this on his FB page, “There are many pieces to quality in lateral flexion. It’s a lot more than just bending the neck around. For example, you don't want to disconnect your reins from the horse's feet (especially the hind feet) but, you also don't want a "conditioned response" where the horse anticipates moving his hind as soon as you pick up the rein. Instead, you want your horse hooked onto your thoughts enough to read your intent, "Does my person intend for me to stay still, or move my feet." Because many clinicians don't discuss the pieces of QUALITY lateral flexion, some other clinicians end up completely disregarding this movement! Let's not throw out the baby with the bath water:-)” I’ve seen this friend ask a horse for LF and, without changing his hand on the rope, he’ll change his intent “now move your feet”….. “stop your feet” ….. “move your feet”… “stop your feet”…. IMO, there’s a whole lot more to “feel” than just the feel on the rope. To him, LF is a great exercise to see how mentally ‘hooked on’ your horse is. Is he really listening THAT closely? I understand why you’re encouraging people to get the reins connected to the hind feet. Waaay too many people miss that piece. But, to me, it goes a lot deeper.
@sineadbeel19177 жыл бұрын
Ross Jacobs I've used it as a way to calm a horse down. doing LF along with DS and creating that association and it works really well. Also it is the beginer to the 1 reign stop. But still I see where you're coming from and maybe it's something I'll start being more mindful of.
@RossJacobs7 жыл бұрын
Sinead, I didn't talk about it in the video but I urge you to be careful about using the 1 rein stop. Some horses need to move their feet when anxious and teaching them to or trying to get them to stop can turn a worry into a panic. A feel a better approach is to disengage the hq, but not insist on them stopping. Just allowing them to yield their hq over and over until the urgency subsides is enough to keep you safe. But if you try to get a horse to stop when it feels the need to move, there is a chance they will flip over or bolt in a sideways panic - I've seen it happen. Cheers
@kazzana90137 жыл бұрын
It is a tool for inexperienced riders to slow their horse down when they feel out of control. That is not a bad thing, if applied before a horse gets up to speed.
@DARKhorses735 жыл бұрын
Oh wow !! Makes so much sense, like what is the point turning the neck for no reason !
@davidcatchpole22277 жыл бұрын
Why did you Mention Linda Perelli But not Pat ? She not that good at horsewoman ship. for what i've seen.
@RossJacobs7 жыл бұрын
I was not picking on anyone in particular, it was just that I easily found a clip of Linda doing a LF and not one of Pat. The point I was trying to make was that the vast majority of trainers teach LF, including most of the big names with the biggest reputations. I just used clips of those in the video because they were the first ones I found that a lot of people would know their names.
@lainahiller41467 жыл бұрын
He is not out to criticize anyone, just to give examples of the trainers who teach LF while standing still.
@h-h-hhuntershorsehelp67527 жыл бұрын
Also, the 2 horses you showed as examples were showing signs of destination addiction, not LF problems I feel
@Trapezius8oblique6 жыл бұрын
I use it thank you
@dorisquinn21356 жыл бұрын
The only really good thing I see about lateral flexion as taught by most trainers is for a great chiropractic adjustment, otherwise I don’t see a point to it either.
@barbf86287 жыл бұрын
so interesting. I will think about this, and ask my gelding to do the same.
@davidcatchpole22277 жыл бұрын
Love your Video
@RossJacobs7 жыл бұрын
Thanks David.
@h-h-hhuntershorsehelp67527 жыл бұрын
In my experience, most of the trainers you mention, teach L F and then the disengage from the LF., eventually getting to the point where you can ask for both.i find it works brilliantly. There are several benefits in my opinion. The most obvious are when mounting, I always do a few LF's before asking for anything else, to ensure I have complete focus no anticipation at that stage. I can pick up my reins and do anything with my rein, but until I ask with my leg, my horses don't move off and that is what I'm after. Appreciate what you say, but don't agree sorry.
@RossJacobs7 жыл бұрын
I think you miss the point that when you teach LF to a young horse and insist on the feet not moving, you kill the connection of the reins to the hq. Even if you then teach the hq to yield (usually this is done by apply inside leg) the reins still do not influence the horse any further than the wither. This causes the problems I highlighted in the video. It's almost an epidemic in the horse world. But in addition, there is no advantage gained by asking a horse to not move its feet - not one single thing. Whereas, by teaching the hq to yield in response to the inside rein some major problems are avoided. I'll be doing a video soon on outside rein through the turns and the reason people use the outside rein is in large part because of the LF they have taught the horse beforehand. As I said in the video, nothing is gained by insisting the feet are still and some problems can be instilled which later have to be addressed. It's best to avoid those potential problems from the start by not teaching LF, but teaching hq yield to the inside rein (without leg).
@h-h-hhuntershorsehelp67527 жыл бұрын
No, I still disagree. You don't kill any connection to the HQ, you teach 2 different things. One is flexing without moving the HQ and the other is flexing and yielding the HQ. 2 seperate lessons. For me, reins are for direction and guidance, our legs are for movement. I don't ever want to lift a rein and have my horse move off without asking him to with my leg. If every time you put pressure on just the rein and your horse yields, what happens if they somehow got he bridle come off an ear or something like that. To fix it, you would be going around and around in circles. I think flexing without moving is MOST important to get your horses focus on what you are doing and have their focus with you before asking them to move off. I'm sure your way can work too but I prefmine.
@RossJacobs7 жыл бұрын
It's okay that I don't change your mind. But if we had a horse in front of us to demonstrate with, I know I could show you the problem and it would cause you to stop and think. But most of the training world agrees with you. I use to agree with you. But I have moved on for good reason. BTW, you still have not explained what is the advantage of insisting the horse's feet do not move while flexing the neck. What does a horse learn from it that provides a practical advantage or is of use in riding? When do you ever want a horse's neck bent and not move its feet?
@h-h-hhuntershorsehelp67527 жыл бұрын
I explained a couple of practical uses in my previous comment. Perhaps you didn't read it all. One practical use is having your horses mind connected with you, focussed on you and not snatching his head away to focus on something else, another could be adjusting the bridle while on board without going round and round in circles, or rubbing on his face, but mainly for having his attention on what I am doing, before I decide we move off.
@h-h-hhuntershorsehelp67527 жыл бұрын
And, it's not so much, I insist he doesn't move his feet.... I teach him when to and when not to move his feet
@jorgealvarado58155 жыл бұрын
Excellent video, it is against the tide... but it makes a lot of sense to me. I do not like robot-like horses nor slaves!
@philvinet41452 жыл бұрын
Just because you do something "different" does not make it better. especially when it shows poorer performance.
@philvinet41452 жыл бұрын
This "trainer" does not realize that in his demonstration of a right rein ...the horse moves it hind end to the left..planting the front end..to do that the horse puts more weight on the front end...this is not what your want. You want the horse to lighten the front end,,engage the core and step further in with the hind feet to enable more athletic and supple action. NOT load the front end more.
@RossJacobs2 жыл бұрын
Firstly, when disengaging the hindquarters using the right rein the hindquarters should move left a step or two. In order to do this correctly the weight MUST and SHOULD shift to the shoulders (specifically the left shoulder). This is the correct way of performing the move. To not shift the weight to the front end would place undue strain on the hindquarters and make it harder to disengage the HQ. Disengagement requires lightening of the hindquarters. Secondly, a horse should be able to load the forehand or hind end at the request of the rider. There are many movements where shifting weight to the front end is required (eg, turn on the forehand). Not all movements require the horse to shift weight to the hindquarters in order to be correct. Loading the forehand or the hind end should both be available. Without that availability you doom your performance to mediocrity.
@philvinet41452 жыл бұрын
@@RossJacobs There are several goals in lateral flexation. 1) to promote no resistance to pressure. 2) Lateral Flexation is asking the horse to stay loose on the top end..but has to do a (side contraction of its side neck and body muscles to get the release. This involves 2 neural signals from the brain. The first is for the opposite muscles to relax prior to engaging the flexed side muscles. If they do not....that is what is causing the stiffness. The later flexation builds muscle strength in the neck, top line and sides. This aids balance in motion.
@RossJacobs2 жыл бұрын
@@philvinet4145 there is not a single benefit gained by lateral flexion that requires the hindquarters to be still. Not one! But by requiring the feet to be stationary creates a disconnect between the inside rein and the hindquarters which then causes crookedness in the turns and circles. It also means that to direct the hindquarters using the riders inside leg requires a driving pressure and not a directing pressure. You claim that lateral flexion aids balance in motion is wrong. The opposite is true. Balance and straightness in a turn is achieved when the inside hind foot is connected to the inside rein. When you don't do this you create crookedness that then must be corrected by using additional aids.
@BravoPerformanceHorses6 жыл бұрын
Times I want a horse to flex or bend without moving the hind end away: *While mounting a horse in training or a skittish horse or any non-deadbroke horse or sometimes a deadbroke horse *Flexing at a standstill *Performing a one-rein stop *On circles *Making turns *Doing rollbacks *Spinning or turning on the hind *Performing a half-pass *Performing a sidepass *Doing lead departures I could go on... Times I would want to pick up on an inside rein and have the horse kick his hind end over as an automatic response: *Never I'm really not sure how lateral flexion would cause a horse to fall out on a circle, so not sure how to address that. I certainly wouldn't want the horse kicking his rear end out of the circle when I pick up the inside rein though, quite the oposite. It really looks like you paused the poor quality video at an angle that made it look like the horse was crossing his front legs, even though he wasn't. The naughty horse example is moot, for me. Horses will do lots of things, trained or not, when acting up. In fact, if that horse had had a good 1-rein stop on him, his misbehavior likely could have been addressed with that and kept the rider safer. I specifically teach horses to flex one direction and move the other direction. It's called counter bending and it's a super useful exercise. I wouldn't want him kicking his hind end over for that either.
@RossJacobs6 жыл бұрын
Rancho Bravo, if you understood the concept that the inside rein is about directing a horse's thought and the thought directs its feet, then you'd see the logic of the hq yield to the inside rein without the rider's inside leg being applied. And you'd understand why the lack of yield of the hq causes horses to be crooked in their turns and circles. Those things you mention (eg one rein stop, standing still at mounting, half pass, etc) have nothing to do with teaching lateral flexion without the hq yielding. I have just spent the last 2 weeks teaching people who were taught lateral flexion and separating the rein aid from the inside leg aid and every single one of them came away convinced how irrational and unnecessary lateral flexions are and the importance of the hq yielding to the inside rein. If you came to a clinic one day I am sure I can convince you too with a little demonstration. I have never failed to help people see the problems lateral flexion causes.
@BravoPerformanceHorses6 жыл бұрын
I think I understand your logic that you direct the horse's feet (actions) by influencing his mind. I disagree that the inside rein should direct the horse (or influence his thoughts) to move his hind quarters and I contend that the opposite is true. The inside rein should NOT move the hindquarters, in all of the examples I listed above, and I can't think of a single instance in which I would want to direct the thoughts of the horse to move his hind feet over when I pick up an inside rein. Furthermore, since I do not want the horse to move his hind as a response to the inside rein, I specifically teach him NOT to do so, and it begins with lateral flexion without moving the hind end. The things I listed have everything to do with teaching lateral flexion without moving the hind. They are all built upon those first lessons with lateral flexion and they are all times that I want the horse to flex or bend to some degree laterally and NOT move his hind the other way. To elaborate further on my examples, when I do a 1-rein stop, I want the horse to STOP; cease moving his feet. I do NOT want the horse to turn circles on his forehand (yield his hind around due to the lateral flexion). When I flex a horse to mount, I want him to keep his feet still, not move his hind end around (this is particularly useful for young and inexperienced horses and horses that have bad habits while mounting). When I do a halfpass, I want the horse to move forward and sideways and I want him bent in the direction of travel. I do NOT want his hind end to kick out the opposite direction or trail too far behind. When I ask for a rollback, I specifically do NOT want the horse to swing his hind end around. When I ask for a lead departure, I specifically want the hind end to move IN THE DIRECTION OF THE BEND, not the other way around! The inside rein should not move the hind end. Everything that I mentioned are maneuvers that require the horse to bend laterally and NOT move his hind end away the opposite direction, especially as an automatic response. I can't think of any times that I would actually want that response (moving the hind away) to an inside rein. Can you give me examples of the maneuvers your horses perform in which you pick up an inside rein and expect the horse to move his hind end out the other direction?
@RossJacobs6 жыл бұрын
I understand that you want your horse to be able to bend without moving his hq and that the inside rein should not move his hq BUT what you want is incorrect. For all the reasons stated in the video, you should not be teaching what you are teaching because it leads to incorrectness (as the least of the problems) and possibly dangerous behaviour (in the worse case of the 1 rein stop). I teach halfpass in the same way most people teach halfpass. But it begins with teaching a horse to respond to the inside rein and disengaging it's hq. When that is consolidated in a horse, then I separately teach it to yield the hq to my legs. Once this is established halfpass is simple for the horse and a non-event. You have to remember that a rider's leg is an incredibly crude form of communication and does not allow the subtleties that the reins do. So by teaching the reins to connect to the mind first separately and then the legs later I can make minute adjustments to the hq to establish correctness and straightness. It's possble to teach a horse halfpass your way (and most people do) but it makes many degrees more difficult for the horse to connect his thought and therefore his feet to the movement.
@BravoPerformanceHorses6 жыл бұрын
Well, first of all, what I want is not incorrect at all. It is correct because that is what is required of the horse in order for it to perform each of the maneuvers I listed. What you are proposing is incorrect in all of the maneuvers and I can't think of a single time when it would be correct. I'll ask you again if you can point out a maneuver a horse would perform in which you pick up an inside rein and expect the horse to move his hind end out the other direction, as you propose in your video. Secondly, let's address the problems you mention that you believe are caused by teaching lateral flexion that is not connected to moving the hind end. I mentioned this in my original comment, but I'll go ahead and go into more depth here since you brought it up again. 1. Dangerous behavior. You contend that teaching a horse to flex laterally without moving its feet leads to a horse that will bolt with its head and neck bent. I will argue that any horse can do this any time, regardless of what method you've used to teach it to flex, and that flexion is NOT the cause of the bahavior, but rather fear and reactiveness (and maybe some lack of respect for the rider) is the cause. This is a bolting problem caused by fear, not a flexing problem caused by training. I'll go even futher to state that teaching the 1-rein stop to a horse that bolts is an effective (if not THE MOST effective) way to stay safe and get the horse stopped should that horse bolt. To be fair, your method would likely be effective as well in getting the horse stopped or slowed down in the event of a bolt, but would still be incorrect for any maneuvers you would want a horse to perform during normal riding. To fix this problem, one must go to the root of the problem - fear, and address that. The 1-rein stop or lateral flexion does not cause bolting and is, in fact, an effective & safe way to deal with a bolt that does occur. 2. Falling in or out on a circle. There are two main reasons a horse would do this, neither of which are caused by flexion. He either, one, has some place that he wants to be and is gravitating toward that spot, or, two, he is a horse, naturally and for millions of years evolved to be "crooked." Starting with the former, the cause is not flexion. The cause is the horse's desire to be in a particular place (e.g. the barn, his stall, other horses). So when he's on the side of the circle near his desire, he'll drift out of the circle toward his desire, and when he's on the side of the circle further from his desire, he'll drift inside the circle toward his desire. The cause is his desire to be "over there" and the cure is to convince him that "over there" is not better. Nothing to do with flexion. The latter is the natural way of every horse and not caused by flexion, training, or anything to do with the human at all. The cause is that, since he is a horse, he is naturally stronger on one side and weaker on the other, allowing him to move more easily in one direction than the other, and causing his shoulder to either bulge out of the circle or fall in on the circle (this is crookedness). The cure, which some would argue is never complete, is to help the horse to develop his muscles evenly on both sides so that he travels "straight" going both directions. It goes against his nature, like a right handed person suddenly learning to write with their left hand. Ironically, just like with the bolting, flexion is an important part of improving a crookedness problem, but does not cause crookedness. This subject of crookedness can get pretty complex and is beyond the scope of this youtube comment, but I'll leave you with three quick articles that go into a little more depth on the cause and correction for crookedness. I hope you'll give them a read. equinefreelance.com/free-articles/turning/ www.meredithmanor.edu/features/articles/faith/bulging_out_falling_in.asp www.walterzettl.net/falloutshoulder.html Lastly, you mention teaching the halfpass (in which it would be incorrect for the horse to move its hind quarters away from the bend), and therein, give support to my very point. You teach the horse to flex laterally (in your incorrect fashion), BUT then you teach him to yield independently off of your legs (presumably toward the bend), so that he can perform the maneuver correctly. He can't possibly do a halfpass correctly if he's disengaging his hind quarters away from the inside rein. The way I (and most people) teach the horse is to teach it to flex & yield independently from the very start and to NOT move the hind quarters away from the inside rein (which is the horse's natural tendency), because we never actually want him to do that. Teaching the halfpass (and other maneuvers) is not difficult if you've laid down the proper foundation leading up to it. All you've done with your method is teach the horse an extra, unnecessary, and incorrect step, for the wrong reasons, that he will never use in any application and which he has to later unlearn.
@RossJacobs6 жыл бұрын
Rancho Bravo, thank you for your long response. I appreciate the time you must have put into it. However, I will try to be much briefer in addressing your points one at a time. 1." I'll ask you again if you can point out a maneuver a horse would perform in which you pick up an inside rein and expect the horse to move his hind end out the other direction," Simple, a balanced circle or any turn requires the hq to yield in the opposite direction to the inside rein, ie the inside hind steps forward and slightly to the outside for the horse to remain balanced on a circle or turn. 2. The 1-Rein Stop. The 1-rein stop is potentially very dangerous because it attempts to shut down the hq. There are some horses that are desperate to move when worried and by try to use the 1-rein stop to prevent that movement can cause panic or near panic leading to horses rearing, falling over etc. I know this because I seen it several times. Instead, flex the horse and allow the hq to yield will minimise the risk of panic and at the same time inhibit the horse's ability to buck, bolt or rear. It is not possible to ensure a horse won't have a freak-out at something terrifying. So it is impractical to talk about taking care of the fear as a "fix-all" solution. If you have horse incapable of extreme behaviour then you have done something horrible to it no longer a horse. It's in their DNA. 3. Crookedness in the Circle. I think this is the basis of the disagreement we are having. You appear to believe that the rider with use of the reins, seat and legs control the balance, movement of the feet and posture of the horse. None of that is true. The brain of the horse controls these things and all we do as riders is transmit our intent to the horse's mind. When the inside rein tells the horse to look, think and focus to the inside then it will be balanced. The horse's thought controls the movement and you are missing this point. It is the job of the inside rein to influence and direct the horse's thought. When that happens things like inside leg and outside rein are redundant. But until you understand and accept that you and I will never be in agreement. I recently has a woman come to a clinic who had the same belief as you and was incredibly skeptical. But I rode her horse and she had a major epiphany about the importance of the inside rein connecting to the hq and that change her view put there by 30 years of instruction. 80% or more of crookedness is caused by resistance due to an inability of the rider to direct a horse's thought. 4. Half-pass. You are confused about my views regarding teaching half-pass. I don't think it adds anything to the discussion other than to say that a horse is capable of moving the hq both away and in the same direction as the flexion, depending on how it is presented. You seem to feel that if you teach one thing, a horse is incapable of also giving a rider the other. This is not correct. It's like saying if you teach a horse to disengage the hq you damage their ability to engage the hq. It's just not true. Thanks for you input.
@pauldopper89305 жыл бұрын
Please REALLY educate yourselves peoples before taking what is said here as oath.
@RossJacobs5 жыл бұрын
I'd be very interested in hearing what you know about the benefits of lateral flexions that I don't. Even though none of the couple of dozen professional trainers I have asked (including many of the biggest names) have not been able to provide a good explanation, I assume you have rationale explanations of why bending the neck laterally, while keeping the feet stationary, is a good idea. Please explain.