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Hard to Catch Horses - Rick Gore Horsemanship

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Expert: Rick Gore

Specialty: Horsemanship


It is never the horse's fault. Good natural horsemanship and a true understanding of horses will always get the best results with a horse.


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Posted by Rick Gore
Category: General

Catching horses and trailer loading seem to be two of the biggest problems for many horse owners. I get asked all the time, why won’t my horse let me catch him? My first advice is “Stop trying to catch him”. A horse knows what is going to happen before it happens. This is because their life depends on it. If they get caught not paying attention, they are dead, eaten or seriously wounded (which means certain death). Horses have to know what is happening around them or they die. It is that simple for the horse and is very instinctive. I have a few videos on hard to catch horses on Youtube:

www.youtube.com/user/horseawareness

By not trying to catch a horse, a horse will not try to get away from being caught. You can still catch him, it may take a little longer, but remember, “The slow way is the fast way with horses.” Therefore, by just approaching your horse to pet them, to say hello, to bring them a treat, you tell the horse you are NOT trying to catch them, so they do not react to being caught. A horse will not run from someone who is not chasing or putting pressure on them. So if you go after a horse with a purpose of catching him, go straight to his head, like a predator, and only approach your horse when you want or need to catch him, it will not take him long for him to figure out what you are up to. If you were a horse, you would know this and would not want to get caught either.

So how do you hide this idea of catching your horse from your horse? It is not easy. Since horses are the king of observation and do not miss much, you really have to use your horse sense. You do not want to look at the head, or look into the horse’s eyes, do not reach out with your hands, do not sneak up and do not talk. You really need to understand pressure, release and driveline. You have to think that you are approaching your horse only to say hello and to rub his withers. By focusing on that, you will not telegraph your intention to catch the horse. So your objective is to pet the horse at the withers, not to catch him. If you think you are fooling the horse and you try to only pet him when the real intent is catching him, he will know it and you will fail. You cannot hide your intentions from a horse. “Horses keep you honest.” The old saying: If you think you can or think you can’t, you are probably right.

Now, that information will only get you so far. You still have to be aware of pressure and release. Anytime you approach a horse, even just to pet it or bring it a treat, you need to move as if you are the Alpha, high horse, and you understand horse language. By knowing when to put pressure on and when to release pressure, how to create a draw, you communicate with your horse and your horse knows that you talk horse. You make the horse know your intentions and you make the horse feel that you are not a threat. When you see birds, deer, rabbits or other animals hanging out with horses, you do not see horses caring or reacting to them. They know these things are not a threat and are not trying to catch them or hurt them. Horses do not know this about you, until you tell them. You tell them this with your body language, not your mouth and saying “good boy”. You read the horse and know when he is getting nervous or when you are putting too much pressure, so you know when to release that pressure. If your horse tries to leave, you need to know how to move in front of the driveline, just enough to stop his forward movement. The more you control the horse’s movement, by anticipating what he is going to do, the more you tell the horse you control him and he will have less incentive to move away from you. If you do not know how to lunge or round pen a horse and create a draw and make a horse come to you or follow you, you will not be successful at catching a horse.

Release is the key to any and all horse handling. Knowing when to release is timing. Knowing how much to release is feel. Understanding this is critical if you want to be successful with horses. Whether it is release of bit pressure, release of leg pressure, release of drive pressure, knowing when and how much to release will enable you to get great results from any horse you work with.

So, for the hard to catch horses, the smart ones, you need to be smarter. Do not think catch and do not chase them. Simply understand how horses talk, how they communicate, be like the horse and join up with your horse. If you can communicate that you are the herd leader and you are higher, then you horse will always allow you to approach him, just do not try to catch him.

I have lots of information about "the Horse" on my web site:

www.thinklikeahorse.org/

Happy trials,

Rick


Member Comments
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Posted By Kimberley Voigt
on February 13, 2011, 10:10 am
My horse can be a bit of a pain in the butt to catch at times. Sometimes I pretend to be looking at something really interesting in the paddock and his curiosity gets the better of him and he just has to come over to investigate. When he comes and stands next to me I give him a bit of a scratch and I walk away. He then follows me around everywhere and is no problem to catch whereas ten minutes earlier he was walking away as soon as I got within 15 metres of him. I don't think its actually his curiosity so much but more like what you were saying. When I'm pretending to look at something I'm not thinking about catching him so much and my body language is softer (perhaps drawing him in?). When I walk off its on my terms and he chooses to follow me, maybe a bit of pressure and release? If not only to get another scratch :)

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