Training Tip: Rollbacks on the Fence Can Improve Your Horse’s Steering

0302_Tip

The more changes of direction you can do with a horse, the better your steering gets. Rollbacks next to the fence work great on horses that have limited steering and work off their front ends. Normally, if your horse is kind of stiff and heavy and not very well-trained, when you turn left, he’s not going to stop, collect himself and turn left with any degree of sharpness. But by using the fence, the horse has two choices. He can keep going forward and bump his nose on the fence, or he can stop, collect himself, suck back over his hindquarters and turn. The sharper turns you can get your horse to do, the more he’ll start to work off his hindquarters. The bigger U-turns your horse does, the easier it is for him to be lazy and drag himself through the turn with his front end. Basically, the fence does all the work and because you’re constantly reinforcing to the horse “Stop, turn, stop, turn,” that automatically puts the horse’s weight back on his hindquarters and improves his steering.

Learn how to teach your horse how to do rollbacks in the Intermediate level exercise, Rollbacks on the Fence.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0829_Tip

9 years ago

Training Tip: Drop the Excuses

Horses are phenomenal people trainers. They train us to do the goofiest things in the world. People make up the…

Read More
0425_03

9 years ago

Our Gates are Open

350-foot diameter outdoor round arena 150-foot x 300-foot covered arena Six 50-foot outdoor roundpens Obstacle course with over 25 challenges…

Read More
0218_02

1 year ago

Stash’s Third Dirt-Road Training Ride

On their third ride together, Professional Clinician Jeff Davis and his colt Stash head out for a training session around…

Read More
0820_Tip

7 years ago

Training Tip: Be Smart About How You Introduce Your Horse to Trail Riding

The ideal location for first taking a horse outside is a long dirt road because it gives you plenty of…

Read More