"A stubborn horse walks behind you, an impatient horse walks in front of you, but a noble companion walks beside you."

Monday, May 7, 2012






"Let a horse whisper in your ear and breathe on your heart. You will never regret it."

Sunday, April 22, 2012

You Know You're a Horse Person When

1.  Your horse gets new shoes more often than you do  
2.  Your mouth waters at the sight of a truck full of hay
3.  Every time you drive past a road construction sight 

     you think the barricades would make really great
     jumps
4.  You consider a golf course as a waste of good 

      pasture land
5.  Your friends no longer ask to get together after 

     school/work or on a weekend because they know
     you'll say, "I can't, I have to ride."
6.  You pull a $17,000 horse trailer with a $1,000 pick-up truck
7.  You buy duct tape by the case, and carry rolls in your pocketbook, briefcase, backpack, and car 

      trunk
8.  You realize finding a horse shoe is truly lucky because you've saved ten bucks
9.  Your boyfriend complains that you love your horse more than you love him and you say, "And 

      your point is?"
10. Someone does something nice for you and you pat them on the neck and say 'good boy'
11. You show up for an appointment in your city clothes and when you get there, people reach

       across the table to pick alfalfa out of your hair
12. No one wants to ride in your car because they'll get sweet feed and hay in their socks and on

      their clothes.  But that's okay, because you'll have to rearrange all the tack to make room for   
      them anyway
13. You look at all the piles of laundry sitting next to your washing machine and most of them are

       breeches, horse blankets, saddle pads, etc.... but you don't even care about the horsey hair 
       residue that will be left in your washer and dryer
14. You say "whoa" to the dog
15. Your mother, who has no grandchildren, gets cards addressed to Grandma signed by the horses
16. You see the vet more than your child's pediatrician
17. You groom your horse daily for hours and you haven't seen a beautician since...?
18. Someone asks for a screwdriver and you hand them a hoof pick
19. You clean tack after every ride but you never, ever, wash the truck
20. On rainy days, you organize the tack room, not the house
21. You can remember worming schedules, lessons, and farrier visits in your head, but often forget 

      your class schedule, household chores, and meals
22. You are unreasonably pleased to get a horse item, ANY horse item, as a gift
23. You stop channel surfing at Budweiser Clydesdale commercials
24. Books and movies are ruined for you if, horsemanship references aren't correct.
25. You actually get to the point where flies don't bother you that much anymore

Monday, March 5, 2012

Anything Is Possible When You Believe

70 Year Old Equestrian
Four years ago, Japanese equestrian Hiroshi Hoketsu was the oldest Olympian to compete in the Beijing Olympics. On Saturday, the 70-year-old rider made a bid to become the oldest competitor in London too.

Hoketsu qualified for the 2012 Summer Olympics this weekend by winning an international dressage meet in France. He was aboard the 15-year-old Whisper.

"To put it pompously," he told reporters, "it was a miracle." Last summer, I thought it would be impossible to make London, so it fills me with deep emotions."

Japanese officials have yet to announce whether Hoketsu, who will be 71 by the time of the Opening Ceremony, will compete.

Hoketsu made his Olympic debut in his his native Japan in 1964, finishing 40th in show jumping. He qualified again in 1988 but was unable to compete when his horse was quarantined. In Beijing, Hoketsu finished 35th out of 47 competitors in the individual dressage event.

The oldest Olympian in history was Oscar Swahn, who competed in the 1920 Antwerp Games at the age of 72. He earned a silver that year as part of the Swedish double-shot running deer team. Swahn won an individual gold medal in his first Olympics in 1908 at the tender age of 60. He won a team gold four years later in Stockholm. Though he was defending champion in the running deer shooting, single shot competition, Swahn only managed fifth place in those 1912 Games. The winner was a 32-year-old named Alfred. He was Oscar's son.

Story provided by Chris Chase Yahoo.com Sports Writer

Sunday, January 22, 2012

The Balancing Act

For all beginner riders fear is the biggest factor that comes into play. It’s natural when sitting atop a thousand pound animal for the very first time. It’s an emotion that stays with a beginning rider for a while. A good instructor never forgets it, is aware of it and knows how to work their student through it.

In order for one to become a skillful rider, they have to master developing an independent seat. Relaxation is a key element but when fear is present, it creates mental and physical tension that any horse is extremely sensitive to. Being aware of your body, how every muscle comes into play, where that tension exists and how to get rid of it will help you find your center of gravity and staying astride like a pro.

“Becoming one with your horse,” is not quite as taxing or extreme as it is in other venues like the picture posted here to the right. Still, it’s just as important for both horse and rider.

You lose your balance; it throws them off kilter as well. Many instructors are relentless when preaching alignment to new students … elbow, hip and ankle drops straight down. If your feet are out in front of you, your upper body will come back behind the motion of the horse. A rider with legs too far behind will force the upper body to go in front of the motion of the horse. These discrepancies will make a horse either run forward, slow down or even stop in order to center your gravity to where it’s much more comfortable for them.

Knowing how to relax and keep your balance is the first step to communicating with your horse whether your motion is a walk, trot or canter and regardless of the discipline you choose.

Friday, January 13, 2012

Aids vs. Cues

There's a lot of talk about aids and cues in the horse world and a lot of it just confuses people. One trainer talks about using your legs as aids and another one tells you to cue your horse with your leg. Neither one probably knows what he's talking about. So it's no wonder horses get confused.  But when the right kind of pressure is applied .... it's a beautiful thing ... particularly in Dressage.

Horses don't care what a trainer calls the things he or she does, they just need to understand them in a horse logical way. As a training method, heeding uses methodically applied directional pressures to create shapes. Pressures that create shapes are called aids. Once the horse understands what shape you want when you apply a particular pressure, you can associate a cue or signal with that shape. So now you can use that cue to tell the horse exactly when you want him to give you the shape. You teach with aids. You ask with cues.
Notice what goes into an aid. It's a pressure. It's applied so it indicates the direction you want the horse to go. And it is applied methodically and consistently. That's not the same as forcefully or insistently or repeatedly. A lot of people use swear pressures instead of aids. Instead of touching the horse with a whip or even just pointing it at him the right way, they slap him with it. Loud swear pressures get a reaction from the horse but they don't teach shapes.

Aids are horse logical. The horse reacts to that pressure or aid in a predictable way that is just natural or instinctive for a horse. For example, if you start approaching a horse from behind, he will turn his head one way or the other to see what's coming. If you're a little to his left, he'll turn his head to the left so he can watch you coming. If you're a little to his right, he'll turn his head to his right.

If you're coming too fast or he's a spooky kind of horse, he may move off and ask questions later. If it's open in front of him, that's the direction he'll go. If it's not, he'll turn in whatever direction he feels he has an opening. Once he's far enough away to feel safe from what might be a predator, he'll turn to take a good look and figure out what's coming. (TRUE? IS THIS CORRECT HORSE LOGIC?) Those are horse logical responses to the pressure you put on the horse as you approached him from behind.

Cues are conditioned responses that are not necessarily horse logical. Cues are supported by rewards. You use a pressure to create the shape you want. You give the horse the cue as soon as he creates the shape. Then you reward him with scratching or something else he likes to tell him that was what you wanted. Eventually you can stop using the aid because as soon as the horse gets the cue, he gives you the shape and looks for his reward.

Once the horse understands that a particular cue indicates a shape you want, you don't need to use the aid to get that shape. Conditioning the horse to respond to cues instead of just to aids is kind of like putting an automatic transmission on a sports car. Now anyone can drive it. A cue is something a trainer can sell with the horse. The owner can ride it and cue it and doesn't have to understand all this stuff about aids to get the shapes he wants to play people games on horseback.

What happens when you stop supporting the cue with a reward? The horse will start backing down the learning curve. First he learned the cue meant he got a reward for giving you a shape. Now he gives you the shape when he gets the cue but there's no reward. Pretty soon he stops giving you the shape when he gets the cue because there's nothing in it for him and there's no horse logical reason to create that shape.

When you put cues on a horse, you've got to monitor the horse's response to those cues. When the horse starts to ignore the cue, you need to drop back to the aid that was used to teach the shape you wanted in the first place and remind him of the relationship between the cue and the shape. Retraining horses to respond to cues is what helps keep trainers in business.

So you need to understand both aids and cues and understand which ones you're using to ask the horse to play our people games. If the horse responds to cues and he starts forgetting those cues or missing them, you need to understand the aid that created the shape in the first place and go back to it to retrain the horse. And use horse logical aids, not swear pressures.

� 1997-2004 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.