Training Tip of the Week: Don’t tie a cinchy horse when saddling

 

A common mistake I see people make that can ultimately lead to a horse becoming cinchy is tying their horses when they saddle them. Whenever you tie a horse up, you take away his ability to move his feet or flee from danger. Then, if he gets scared or reactive, in his mind the only thing he can do to escape is to pull back and try to break free from the halter and lead rope. The extra pressure of being tied and getting cinched up can overwhelm more sensitive horses. If you tie up a cinchy or young green-broke horse when saddling, if he spooks or the saddle slips under his belly, you’re going to have a big problem where not only could the horse potentially hurt himself, but now getting saddled will become a major source of fear.

If you have a cinchy horse, saddle him out in an open area like a roundpen. That way he doesn’t feel trapped, and if he wants to move his feet, he can. Always set your horse up for success, not failure.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1212_Tip

9 years ago

Training Tip: People for Horses

Some people and horse personalities just don’t mesh. There are probably people in your workplace that you just don’t get…

Read More
1218_05

8 years ago

Get Connected

By Martin Saddlery According to Gandhi, you should “Live as if you were to die tomorrow, and learn as if…

Read More
FILES2f20152f082f0811_04.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Clinton’s Training Facilities at Your Fingertips

While having the right knowledge and being resourceful in your environment are keys to training your horse, there’s no denying…

Read More
0927_03

10 years ago

Looking for Advice Outside of the Training Kits?

Stuck on an exercise from the Fundamentals or Intermediate Series? Need help fine-tuning Yield the Forequarters? Can’t figure out how…

Read More