Last night I was speaking to a friend and fellow trainer from California. He had called to talk about the clinic I’m scheduled to do out there soon and of course the conversation worked it’s way around to Indeed.
I told him I was finally getting happy with the way he is going. For the first time he starting to feel the way I want a horse to feel – no tension or stiffness in his body as he reaches out to my hand and just follows the bit. Not perfect yet, but getting there. I mentioned I was sort of amazed it had taken me so long to get this far and he very wisely told me, “Hey Mike, it takes what it takes.”
Well, you can’t argue with that.
So, the fact is it has taken me just a little over 2 years to get Indeed to the point where I feel we can start to move on. That’s about 18 months longer than I’m used to taking to get a horse to this point, but, it takes what it takes.
While I’m on the subject, I’m riding him almost exclusively in the double bridle. Yes, back in December of 06 I tried him in it, but then I went back to the snaffle for another year before going back to the double. Now I ride him in the double because with it my corrections are “clear, effective, and over with”. In just the snaffle, they are simply not as effective and tend to become more arguments. In the double I can ride him very lightly and spend most of my time encouraging him to reach more into my hand. In the snaffle, he spends most of his time trying to run through my hand. For me there is no question – I’ll ride him in the double, press on with the training, and from time to time try him again in the snaffle and see what of he thinks of it.
Interestingly, the bridoon I use in his double is the exact same bit as his regular snaffle. Well, whoever invented the curb bit was probably a lot more of a horseman than I’ll ever get to be, and he figured out that device a long time before I arrived.
Oh well, enough about me. Here’s something you may find useful in your work with your horse.
Today, almost near the end of a wonderful ride, we came cantering across the diagonal about to do a simple change when he noticed there was something in his favorite spook corner that was not just right. In fact someone had left a manure fork leaning on the rail.
I immediately decided it wasn’t important that he had been going past it without incident for the previous 40 or so minutes. My recollection was that we were just starting simple changes back in the late fall of 06 when his great “melt down” began. When that happened something went off in his mind and he started tossing his head straight up and bolting. (He was so fast and practiced at that maneuver it that took me months to figure out a way to deal with it!) So, my intuition was the simple change had more to do with what he was upset about than the silly fork.
The above is specific to him, but here’s the single issue that’s generic to every one of us when dealing with these issues regardless of whether they’re spooking at the corner, stopping at a jump, or refusing to walk through a puddle. Each of us has to decide whether we want our horse to go into that corner, over that fence, or through that silly puddle because he’s more afraid of us than the corner, fence or puddle, or, because he’s learned to trust us completely when we tell him he’s safe doing what we ask.
I made my decision many years ago – I want my horse to perform because he trusts me.
I’ll talk about how to accomplish this goal in another post – “Attitude trumps technique” soon. I’ll also be putting up some clips of Indeed schooling at home very soon.
Mike