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@LittleDotCom17 күн бұрын
All of these unnecessary harsh comments are the reason why comments get turned off people. This lady only asked for help why is why we are ALL here. We are all here to learn from Ryan. Please be kind.
@donnac.160918 күн бұрын
Nice to see experienced horse trainers coming together to help this young horse! Every horse is dif as are breeds, so any trainer that reaches out to another shows how good they really are! No trainer knows it all ...horses teach too!!
@loridorii18 күн бұрын
A) not her horse, she's the trainer B) every horse person is allowed to have a blow to their confidence. I know that in my 20+ years of horses, I've had more than a few. Kudos to her to reach out to someone who can help, that can be really hard to do C) smart, extroverted horses are my favorite, but they are trouble, and they know it! I say mine will "try anything twice", but the truth is, if it worked once he's going to keep trying until it works again. I have to be constantly thinking and keeping an eye on him while I'm with him, and while I won't have to do it forever, while he's young, I have to make sure I'm thinking more than he is
@wildthunderbird18 күн бұрын
It's very enjoyable watching you work with the horse and human. You have a very calm alpha energy that's relaxing and I find peaceful. Great video! Thank you 😊
@ryanrosehorsemanship18 күн бұрын
Thanks, I appreciate that. 😊
@LittleDotCom17 күн бұрын
Agreed. And I’d say more and more all the time. ❤
@SavedbyGraceinTx18 күн бұрын
Great diplomacy Ryan! I pray she watches this video many times and begins to see the timing, placement of tools and lower energy needed for this particular horse. Good video for everyone.
@RosebudBB16 күн бұрын
This lady trainer has done a wonderful job working with this young stallion, so with a few tweaks from Ryan she will do even better 💖 Each horse is different and we all come to a point where we need a little guidance from someone that knows more than we do to help us be better at our craft! Learning never ends! Another great Ryan & trainer video 💖
@melanies.603016 күн бұрын
💯 👍
@janeenrose809714 күн бұрын
Wow! Big horse for so young! Thanks to the trainer for putting herself out here for all of us to learn from Ryan. This lesson applies to all horses and owners. Thanks for sharing!😊
@epona916618 күн бұрын
I'm annoyed by how critical people are being of this woman. She's not talking over him; she's talking to him, like any normal person would. And she's the trainer, not the owner, so it's not on her to decide whether or when to geld him. Lastly, there's not enough footage of her handling this horse for anyone to judge her abilities. Ryan is very complimentary of her overall training skills and is just suggesting a few tweaks. People should respect that. Many of Ryan's subscribers probably also subscribe to Steve Young. Steve always makes a point of insisting that commenters not attack the people he's working with. I'm sure he can handle people criticizing his methods, but he's totally right that his clients should be off limits. I think Ryan should be making the same request, since so many people don't seem to have basic good manners.
@ginnychibbaor457818 күн бұрын
If you want to grow....you need to hear things that should be improved.
@kidstuff4455518 күн бұрын
Yes, without these people agreeing to be filmed, we couldn't ever have these videos
@epona916618 күн бұрын
@@ginnychibbaor4578 Totally agree. And Ryan is telling her how to modify her approach to this particular horse. But no one here in the comments has offered any valid suggestions (last I read thru them, at least, which was a few hours ago).
@PocahontasTruckingLady17 күн бұрын
@epona9166 yes, i think the same as you do about what you wrote! I'm watching Ryan's videos and also Steve Young Horsemanship videos, Warwick Schiller Horsemanship videos and Pear Tree Ranch /Jack's videos 🙂. Those horsetrainers tell so clearly what they do when they are doing something with horses.
@lydiagould309017 күн бұрын
Yes, agree 100%. Can these negative comments not just be deleted?
@red8080818 күн бұрын
I used this and taught it to a student with a huge, extroverted, biting OTTB. It helped the horse and owner a ton in the early stages of re-training. Thank you Ryan!
@jennyrosd200318 күн бұрын
The lady is gonna do great with that. Simple and effective. Great job explaining.
@JanaRussellNails18 күн бұрын
I love this demo! He's so smart and learned quickly, beautifully. Thank you Ryan and trainer.
@patriciolopez842018 күн бұрын
with the first minute of the video, you can see what was the problem hahaha
@dawnaustin455617 күн бұрын
Immediately the horses' demeanor changed now that he has bounderies. I've applied the owning space to my trouble horse and its been a game changer. Thanks, Ryan!
@shankarbhattacharjee194317 күн бұрын
Nice to see experienced horse trainers coming together to help this young horse!
@topcatwarrior18 күн бұрын
Imho she needs to adjust her energy to a calmer state especially when working with stud colts.
@ginnychibbaor457818 күн бұрын
Yes, and listen not talk so much.
@epona916618 күн бұрын
@@ginnychibbaor4578 She's asking questions, and she's probably paying him for a lesson, so she has every right to talk.
@melanies.603016 күн бұрын
@ginnychibbaor4578 She had a few questions, but I don't think it was anything excessive or distracting. She actually did a great job listening and modifying her speed as suggested by Ryan while on camera. I thought the session went as well for the human as for the horse.
@danforster421218 күн бұрын
I really appreciate your consistency Ryan.
@catherinehanley303617 күн бұрын
You can even see the difference in this horse in the video straight away when you SLLLOOOWWW down 😊 It’s a concept that has helped me so much, Ryan talks about it a lot, not tiptoeing around, just having the awareness about being too quick. Takes a while to change if it’s a habit to move fast. The trainer in this video will be able to go back and watch, which is great. Thanks for sharing your training session.
@dianebannister459117 күн бұрын
It seems to me that this horse is very smart and gets the training fairly quickly. I appreciate Ryan's easy, gentle style of training. I watched one channel months ago whereby the guy kept whipping the horse with a hard whip. I exited the channel and couldn't watch that. I have watched Steve Young for 2 years. This is the first I watched Ryan. The training looks good to me.
@NYLADY1360118 күн бұрын
She is flipping that lead rope all over the place so the already young and high strung horse will react negatively! Bravo! 🙄
@lway833216 күн бұрын
I admire her for seeking Ryan’s help! It seems as though the colt thinks she is his playmate which can be sooo dangerous.
@ddunning620718 күн бұрын
Good video Ryan.
@kidstuff4455518 күн бұрын
The very best thing would be for him to be in a large enough space to play with other horses. Young horses especially NEED socialisation, interaction etc. I never keep my young ones (under 3) on their own ever, and I do own a stallion I've had since he was a foal. I'm very lucky yo live in Australia where I can keep my horses outside year round, my stallion has never been stabled and he's very sensible
@epona916617 күн бұрын
I agree that would be ideal, but do we know that he isn't playing with other horses on a regular basis? They don't say that. Clearly he spends some time in a stall, but I didn't assume it was all the time. Maybe so.
@patpindus598714 күн бұрын
It’s very interesting to watch an animals reaction to the energy of a person.
@PocahontasTruckingLady17 күн бұрын
Good and clear things Ryan helped that woman to do with that young stallion 👍🏻🙂. I'm watching Ryan's videos and also Steve Young Horsemanship videos, Warwick Schiller Horsemanship videos and Pear Tree Ranch /Jack's videos 😄. Those are the horsetrainers that tell so clearly what they do when they are doing something with horses. I'm from Finland and studying to be a horsetrainer, so i could help horses and their owners with their problems 😊. I love watching these videos from Ryan ❤, Steve ❤, Jack ❤ and Warwick ❤. You can learn a lot from them 👍🏻
@claudias46018 күн бұрын
I've been training horses for decades and I still watch all those guys and some others. I never do more than two horses at a time anymore cuz I'm in my 70s now but there's still things to learn or remember. Here's some other trainers you might enjoy following. Different personalities and perspectives: Stacy Westfall kzbin.info/door/qPxAaCHNGBa7d9WD61mMwQ Herm Gailey youtube.com/@hermgaileyalifetimewithhorses?si=C5qrt-yOH9ihsewA Josie Matthews youtube.com/@basichorsetraining?si=_6QUbChOaqC7O4z7 Tim Anderson youtube.com/@timandersonhorsetraining?si=Ri3oF5BWyTIbefjr Callie King - more about riding than horse training but with lessons about horse anatomy, conversations and tips for older riders and much more. youtube.com/@horseclass?si=11Z15v_uCPWykeEr
@NewMexicoVaquera18 күн бұрын
We worked with a lot of young studs at the cutting horse operation I worked at, doing sale prep for the NCHA futurity sale in Fort Worth. With their breeding, the only ones we gelded were the occasional cryptorchids. The buyers wanted them intact because the really good ones were eventually stood at stud. You definitely can't give them an inch, even as yearlings, because they'll take a mile.
@melanies.603016 күн бұрын
Just curious-- does Ryan's method differ from what you used?
@NewMexicoVaquera15 күн бұрын
@@melanies.6030 They're all individuals so we treated them as such. But, if you wonder if we "bumped" them out of our space, absolutely. In fact, I purchased a mare that crowded me when leading and my solution was to swing a dressage whip behind me as I walked to show her what my personal space is. She did walk into the swing and learned. A mature stallion can easily pick a person up by the shoulder and fling them and many have done that when they are not taught well. As Ryan has pointed out, horses that can't be handled or are dangerous do not fare well so we owe it to them to teach them boundaries, just like their dams did.
@judiththompson118912 күн бұрын
Thank you Ryan. I believe that this is one of your most important posts. We all need to master these skills first for safety, second to establish our role as calm, assertive leaders. Animals (children as well) need a leader and consistent boundaries. The foundation of horse leadership is in management of personal space as you nicely demonstrate here. Second, the leader must make the follower move their feet as you demonstrate with creation of a line that the horse must move off of. Nicely demonstrated here. I do have questions about the head bobbing, pushing, pulling. We teach them to hold their head still with positive Reinforcement although I believe more authority is needed. Please spend more time on these important fundamentals. Again, thank you.
@lisakuehn643618 күн бұрын
Knowing when to quit what you’re doing is such a key.
@glenscheible946718 күн бұрын
Sometimes you have to train the trainer's more than the horse. The Horse senses how hyper the lady is.
@rhondaskiles574011 күн бұрын
Never stand directly in front of a horse you will getknicked down every time and it is all your fault not theirs
@GlendaFoxhlove-n9f18 күн бұрын
Incredible training 👏
@KingsMom83118 күн бұрын
Great video! Thanks Ryan
@stinakarlsen318118 күн бұрын
It seems that the lady is a little out of focus. Missing contact? He is stunningly beautiful.
@lindalape849316 күн бұрын
Ryan is the best choice of trainer to go to!!
@melanies.603016 күн бұрын
Agreed. I started out watching some other channels, but Ryan's calm assertiveness, absolutely logical methods, explanations, and ability to teach humans as well as horses, puts him at the top for me.
@sweeney222217 күн бұрын
I’m going to use this w my OTTB. He’s new to me and we are building our bond and respect. He’s a good egg w a few ground issues not like this big boy in the video but things that need to be addressed consistently. This exercise will be a good one for us. Awesome video!
@undersixty18 күн бұрын
That stallion has her number.😂 She's tooo rushed and trying to make him do stuff rather than teaching him to want to do the task.
@DARKhorses7318 күн бұрын
The horse relaxed right away. ❤
@58landman12 күн бұрын
Very nice colt. Great training, too.
@marilynbowe65017 күн бұрын
So helpful and important for safety and respect. Happy new year!
@ddunning620718 күн бұрын
Not picking colts drives them nuts. Smart ones get mean fast from nit picking.
@madelinealdred515217 күн бұрын
Great video and teaching, hope the lady shut up long enough to hear and see what you were doing
@bwenluck981216 күн бұрын
The lady is paying for Ryan to teach her--she's entitled to ask questions. That's how some people learn....
@Kholoured12 күн бұрын
Other then seeing her being too fast with everything. She is a reactive energetic petson. And you can see the horses behavior change from when He was working with him and when she was. She is a move, do, get results trainer. Where he is a lets take our time, do it but at the right pace, whenever you get it kinda trainer. He has patience with the process, she does not. She does need to slow down, slow her walk, slow her reactions, slow her mindset. He is responding to her high energy, AND he is a stud lol so he is always taking the challenge and literally running with it. He could use a calmer trainer lol
@hhlagen15 күн бұрын
Thank you Ryan. Another great training video to learn from.
@sweeney222217 күн бұрын
I’m going to use this w my OTTB. He’s new to me and we are building our bond and respect. He’s a good egg w a few ground issues not like this big boy in the video but things that need to be addressed consistently. This exercise will be a good one for us.
@ppww607618 күн бұрын
React slower was probably one of the most valuable lessons. I think it will make what she is asking clearer as well as reward/correction.
@WhosOnn12 күн бұрын
Stallion is so pretty 🎉
@EicherRanch16 күн бұрын
Awesome advice Ryan 👍
@ryanrosehorsemanship16 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@lisashavlik226418 күн бұрын
You are a fantastic teacher! I don't own a horse but I might try this with my pushy male corgi!!😀
@ryanrosehorsemanship18 күн бұрын
😂..... our corgi is named Gus. He has selective hearing.
@rltreasure18 күн бұрын
@@ryanrosehorsemanshipcorgis are the best dogs ever!
@shellysonnen569818 күн бұрын
Ooof l wouldnt want her training my horse 😮 Ryan yes,
@maggiemay551018 күн бұрын
I hear ya . He is NOT a problem horse ...
@epona916618 күн бұрын
@@maggiemay5510 No one has labeled him a problem horse. But they are trying to keep him from becoming one , which is why she called Ryan in the first place.
@shellysonnen569817 күн бұрын
No he said becoming difficult, and good for her for asking for help? But her energy with him was obviously too much. Ryan literally just took the rope and he was a differant horse. And yes she was talking over him and interrupting him. Simply not my type of trainer.
@epona916617 күн бұрын
@@shellysonnen5698 What I said was that no one has labeled him a "problem horse" (responding to a comment) which is true. Ryan just said he is starting to become difficult to handle on the ground. And I agree that this trainer doesn't look at all effective in this video. None of my [many] comments are supportive of the horse handing we're looking at. (Some of the rope action is clearly intended to keep him out of her space, but most of it seems gratuitous and purposeless.) I'm just disgusted that people are dumping on this woman who is putting herself out there for our learning benefit. And that's on Ryan, actually. He must know she doesn't come across well, and should have either not shown that footage or implored commenters not to be judgmental in their remarks -- like Steve Young does. Another thing Steve does is he always makes a point of noting -- to the owner or trainer -- that the horse has a history w them so it will be harder for them to implement the techniques he's recommending than it is for him.
@BranikWolfe17 күн бұрын
@@shellysonnen5698 Regarding him being a different horse as soon as Ryan took the lead, they don't come charging and acting up with a new person the second they take over. There's always a honeymoon period. They are the most trouble for the ones they know. Like people. You're the biggest pain the butt to your family and friends, not strangers. Give him a few days/week in a new person's care and he'd be testing boundaries then too.
@nogames898218 күн бұрын
I hate this pop pop that people do with the lead drop. I hate it. I don’t understand it. What is the point? Are you doing? Is pissing off the horse. I don’t know when this little trend started, but I wish it would go away soon.
@danonfrear988718 күн бұрын
Is it me cause she is taunting him and why does she keep shaking the lead shank at his head?????
@loridorii18 күн бұрын
Sometimes young, extroverted colts need a reminder that you're on the other end of the lead. Also, without a stick, with a horse that's striking? You want to make sure they're respecting your space. It can be really scary to have a horse strike at you, and everyone has the right to have a blow to their confidence
@ginnychibbaor457818 күн бұрын
@loridorii Her ability to control the lead is all over the place. Even at times he looks like he will step on it. Very sloppy.
@loridorii18 күн бұрын
@@ginnychibbaor4578 I'm going to guess Ryan has him on a longer lead than she's used to, yes
@epona916618 күн бұрын
@@loridorii I totally agree, but she did have a stick. She just wasn't using it effectively (except at about the 2:20 mark) where she wielded it exactly right a couple of times. I'm sure she didn't want to bonk him with it, but Ryan was able to show her how little she would have to touch him with it to get the point across.
@youiswhoyouis330418 күн бұрын
This is certainly a personal peeve of mine, but dealing with a number of very large, very expensive hunter/jumper/dressage young ones...is the infantilization of them. "Oh, they're just a baby!" Yes. A baby that can kill you! Around 1 to 2, I start expecting them to adhere to the same boundaries and rules I'd expect of adult horses. Sure, they're still mentally and physically developing, so it might (and should) take them longer to instill certain behaviors, but manners should always be enforced. It saves lives. Handlers, other animals, and the young horses themselves.
@linzysnoesy351917 күн бұрын
You are brilliant
@laracroce581413 күн бұрын
She really needs to be careful yanking on that neck so hard. It won’t finish developing until he’s almost 6yo. This can cause damage. Beautiful job though, Ryan !
@tbaker72918 күн бұрын
That stud colt needs to be with other stud colts near his age. He doesn't know how to stay in his own bubble.
@epona916618 күн бұрын
They don't say whether he's routinely out with other colts his age, so we shouldn't assume he isn't.
@tbaker72918 күн бұрын
@epona9166 If he was out with others his own age he would be more mindful of others space. I use to work with 12 head of 2 & 3 yr stud futurity colts and none of them acted like this.
@epona916616 күн бұрын
@@tbaker729 I defer to your greater experience but he’s really not that bad, so I question whether you can draw many conclusions from his behavior. He settled right down when Ryan brought the energy down.
@jcpalmer605118 күн бұрын
Bred,broke n trained for over 30 yrs n for the most part you have problems with studs in turning out with others- I have had some with very good temperament but for the most part they get smarter after gelding! One lady spoiled one stud so bad in raising him he was a savage and ended up being put down! He attacked the trainer assistant when she brought him for evaluation!
@epona916618 күн бұрын
Sounds like that poor horse in the Buck movie. A very sad situation.
@kerri559516 күн бұрын
I would like the client to have a mic so I can hear the questions and comments directed to Ryan
@carolynstewart846518 күн бұрын
She is not an experienced horse trainer. Her timing and demeanor denote a total rookie. Flipping the lead rope shows how ineffective she is.
@epona916616 күн бұрын
I think it would be fair to say she isn’t skilled with un-started horses. Maybe she has rarely if ever worked with one so young (or this high energy). She was probably hired to train them in jumping. This is more like colt starting territory. Very diff skill set.
@elizabethmcintyre368011 күн бұрын
All of us were inexperienced at one time! Even you. That’s why she’s asking for help. I’d think you would appreciate her wanting to do better, not trash on her for not knowing what you know.
@hs516718 күн бұрын
It seems unnatural to separate them from a herd at young ages, where they can learn boundaries and manners with other horses.
@epona916618 күн бұрын
Why are you assuming he's separated from the herd? They didn't say that.
not a stud problem. an uneducated owner problem. even while working with you she was giving signals that crossed each other and was snapping him all around. no wonder he was striking at her
@melanies.603016 күн бұрын
At the end of the video I felt she finally became self-aware, and showed an improvement in slowing down. When she watches this, I bet she'll see what you saw in the beginning and go "omg..I DO need to chill out!"
@lindalape849316 күн бұрын
The only thing I see that she needs to do is slow down. The colt is picking up on her energy.
@judiththompson118913 күн бұрын
Having a similar experience w a young mare. Same, perhaps extroverted and intelligent. Small steps. Question. When tied, do we wait for her to be still?
@gertrudewest453517 күн бұрын
Some people should not own horses. The trainer is good but she’s in over her head. Stallions are for experienced trainers. That stallion is easy.
@rc692211 күн бұрын
Some people should not have children either 🤷♂️
@JessicaAronson-c4m18 күн бұрын
This woman has no clue or feel and the horse has zero respect for her.
@jcpalmer605118 күн бұрын
Exactly!
@melodyb128716 күн бұрын
And good for her for understanding that and reaching out for help.
@jcpalmer605116 күн бұрын
And Ryan knows this and is just too kind to tell her she is over her head until she gelds this colt!
@melodyb128710 күн бұрын
@@jcpalmer6051 If I understood correctly she is training this colt for someone else. It isn't hers to geld.
@jcpalmer605110 күн бұрын
Then the "Someone else" should figure it out! He'll get a lot smarter!
@AnnJo2422418 күн бұрын
This is weird but...every stallion I rode sonner or later was ridden by kids, Most of the stallions I rode were just sweet puppies, no testosterone show seriously without asking. When we were going for trail, we were just making sure stallion always leads, if he got loose between other ridden mares in arena, we would make sure we always turn our mares face to face with stallion. In so many years between so many stallions and often rented studs I never had any problem. But yes, they were ridden 3h daily (with breaks).
@The-Lonely-Equestrian17 күн бұрын
Lmao the horses at my barn probably work 3-5 hours a WEEK!!!
@kyliezimmerman255217 күн бұрын
I have got a 6yr old mare that reactive and bringing her back in to break in and she likes to be close to you so this be my thing to do is teach her space.
@likaangel83024 күн бұрын
High end horses 🙄 Adout a Mustang. Every Mustang I've worked with are so respectful, because they learn it in the wild. 👍❤️ I love my Mustang horses
@plips7175516 күн бұрын
Give him more work in large arena and with obstacles.
@CathyAlix-fl8vi12 күн бұрын
correction: toward her
@vickylewis741712 күн бұрын
Could this be done with a 16 year old horse? My horse has no respect for personal space and bites me and when I ask him to back up he lunges at me with teeth and front legs
@ryanrosehorsemanship12 күн бұрын
Yes it can but if he's that committed you should probably get a professional to help.
@vickylewis741712 күн бұрын
@ryanrosehorsemanship thank you for replying. I have gone back to ground work with him and currently watching your videos from 10 months ago with an ex-showjumper who reminds me of my horse. I love the way you worked with that horse
@jodimarsh70814 күн бұрын
I don’t see stallion material, would make a great gelding tho!
@rhondaskiles574018 күн бұрын
Spsce is the first thing you teach them as a foal
@gabrielestrietzel360417 күн бұрын
Danke für das Video, dieses Pferde-Verhalten finde ich persönlich auch herausfordetnd - zumal junge Tiere sich nicht lange konzentrieren - je nach Interieur des Pferdes wird er evtl immer wieder "nachfragen" ? es sieht für mich so aus, dass die Trainerin schneller auf das Agieren des Pferdes reagiert, was unruhiger wirkt. Der Trainer gibt nach Abstand-Forderung sofort Pausen, was mir gefällt. Liebe Grüße
@rhondaskiles574011 күн бұрын
You h9nestly cant tell ifyou wnt to keep them as a stud until they are 3 or 4 dont treatcthem different than a mare.
@britnistillson593518 күн бұрын
Do you think this approach woukd work well for a 4 year old OTTB? She is very in your space begging and searching for treats, very adamant on getting something and very offended when corrected. I watch many training videos, methods, etc but havent had many opportunities to put the knowledge to use.
@kriss278718 күн бұрын
Yes, this…. Done properly will help with your OTTB learning to give space. Also, my opinion, don’t let her have treats by hand for at least the time being, I learned the HARD WAY, that those treats being your choice and not the horse’s choice seems DIFFERENT to YOU, but not to most horses. I took on training a 5 year old stud that had been born in a petting zoo where he was for the first year…. Every person! gave him treats every approach! At 1, He went to a home, who unfortunately unknowingly continued that behavior. They’d walk up, if they didn’t have a treat ready, he’d push, shove, paw, pin ears, then bite. Sometimes one behavior, most times all of them. So they were taught by him🤣, to Always approach with the treat, and keep giving them as long as they interacted. Then they wanted him trained… I took on the challenge…. He was very much offended by my lack of letting him continue his bad habits at first, but progressed the MOST during our training time by me using THIS method. And treats were only allowed in a feed pan, so people were no longer the treat dispenser and he looks for them elsewhere now.
@britnistillson593517 күн бұрын
@@kriss2787 good idea! I am no trainer by any means lol I had my own horse, a 7 year old Standardbred I think it was. She had no behavioral issues, just wasn't anything fancy so I put some buttons on her, but that was 3 years ago and I haven't done anything since so I'm struggling to get back into the swing of things and I've never worked with such a headstrong in your pocket horse so I was stumped.
@claudias46018 күн бұрын
@@kriss2787Agree. I never give treats by hand except for the rare stretching exercises - I watch the horses and they're always stretching to scratch or get a fly off so I don't think they're really necessary most of the time. I have one client who feels deprived by not being able to give treats by hand all the time. I let her give one treat at the end of the training lesson (We are at the point where I'm teaching her how to continue training her horse), but I have her make the horse back up and her walk up to the horse to give a treat - never letting the horse come into her to get it. Seems to be working ok with this one.
@violajackson915415 күн бұрын
She needs to ground herself more, connect with the horse and let go of her hectical behaviour. That huge wave of energy gets the horse all hectic. As for Brian, I wish he would praise the horses, when they do something correctly or even think about in that direction. Normally horses are so eager to please and really start to grow and shine with praise. But I guess it is a completely different approach ;-) - however it works 👍🏻
@CathyAlix-fl8vi12 күн бұрын
why is she pulling him toward him and then shaking the lead rope to move him back. I find her handling him very confusing. Sort of like "come here and go away". I don't understand her lead shaking on any level. It looks stupid and pointless.
@m3hsid1018 күн бұрын
🙂
@Jan-k1c17 күн бұрын
She just doesn’t have the feel at all!
@catherinethemba16 күн бұрын
This woman has no clue. Ruining a perfectly good colt.
@epona916616 күн бұрын
She’s not ruining him. He’s fine. The fact that she brought Ryan in just proves she knows she’s not doing right by him.
@OneMeanArtist18 күн бұрын
Definite Karen vibes, she keeps talking over you. A for effort, Ryan.
@spidersweb274118 күн бұрын
I disagree, I think she's just asking questions
@epona916618 күн бұрын
Totally unwarranted sniping. She's not even remotely a Karen, and she isn't talking over him. She's just talking to him. He's wearing a mic so we can hear him better than she can. He obviously has much respect for her, and since he knows a TON more about her than any of us do, it's unfair for people to be judging her like this.
@lindalape849316 күн бұрын
This video won't let me hit the like button! 🤨
@hollybruch117017 күн бұрын
It's that whip hes perfectly TERRIFIED.... COME ON... 🙏
@epona916616 күн бұрын
You’re kidding right? She’s hardly using it at all. It’s all the rope flipping that’s the problem. Ryan is the one flinging the whip around and he’s not scaring him at all. Just getting him out of his space.
@MishCreates0118 күн бұрын
👀👍🏼☕️
@LauraRose-zw3bh17 күн бұрын
Geld him !
@karinschoeb964613 күн бұрын
Deutsch
@jcpalmer605118 күн бұрын
Ignorant people not wanting to do the right thing n GELD! The poor horse will NEVER be able to be turned out with other horses! Wake up lady!
@ddunning620718 күн бұрын
It's possible that his lines are important to keep going. But, with that being said, not sure she's the hand to train a stud.
@jcpalmer605118 күн бұрын
ya U got that right!
@topcatwarrior18 күн бұрын
Since this colt is a yearling, the owner may be waiting until he’s a two year old. That is not uncommon for sport horses.
@epona916618 күн бұрын
Do the right thing? This isn't a stray dog situation where the decision is obvious. It's also not true that a stud can't be turned out with other horses. As an example, Warwick Schiller has at least one stud (Rey) and he's turned out with other horses. Depends on the horse and how they're trained. Besides, you don't know that he isn't going to be gelded. If it's a breeding facility, then they're likely making decisions based on phenotype as well as genotype, and it may be too early to judge phenotype. Maybe not be so quick to judge.
@jcpalmer605118 күн бұрын
Speaking in general terms- for the most part studs are a problem trying to turn out with other horses- 30+ yrs experience I have found this to be true in most cases- also this gal does not have the experience to carry thru with his training- they do get smarter after gelding!
@ЕкатеринаЕкатерина-т8с18 күн бұрын
She is don't understand what is she doing. Very aggressive and noisy woman.
@lauralauren643218 күн бұрын
I HATE this provoking Parelli BS coming to Europe. These ladies have a huge lack experience and self confidence. Horses feels it and want out of there.
@jaytalley785514 күн бұрын
Stop playing with him leave him alone until your ready to ride all you are doing is teaching him is bad habits bottom line .if she is a trainer she should already know this
@bonniegettingthrumyday286618 күн бұрын
GELD, HOBBLE, TRAIN. ITS A HIRSE NOT A JET ENGINE.
@rltreasure18 күн бұрын
You’re off base. Watch and learn.
@rhondaskiles574018 күн бұрын
You dont geld until they are 2
@Ilse-e4s12 күн бұрын
Hobble..? Yeah very smart..
@rhondaskiles574012 күн бұрын
@bonniegettingthrumyday2866 hobble is what you do to keep a horsefrom wondering when you let them graze .gelding is the owners option training is prefered if the stud has the conformation ,disposition and breeding
@Ilse-e4s11 күн бұрын
I know what a hobble is. I just think it's a bad and irresponsable tool to use in training