Find it on the No Worries Club Website: Horse Has Too Much Spunk

NWCfind

Aspen is a really nice mare with perfect ground manners. However, my problem is when I ride her. She is an extremely sensitive “crackhead” horse who is sweet, not spooky, and she tries any discipline I throw at her (with too much spunk). I can flex and do One Rein Stops until the sun goes down, but she is still extremely crackhead-ish. When I squeeze, she jumps out of her skin and goes forward like a spring. What suggestions do you have, or how long does it normally take to fix a horse’s incessant need for speed? I want her spunk, without the disrespect! Oh, she also anticipates badly! – Asmo13

Listen to Clinton’s answer by logging on to the No Worries Club website or the Downunder Horsemanship app and going to the Q&A video section.

The No Worries Club website is home to hundreds of hours of training video content available to members only. This exclusive content includes full-length TV shows, Q&A’s with Clinton that cover a variety of training topics, a Testing the Method series that focuses on the Fundamentals and Intermediate levels of the Method, and past No Worries Club videos. Learn more about the benefits of being a No Worries Club member on our website or call us at 888-287-7432.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0823_02

10 years ago

The Horse You’re Dreaming Of

Clinton has mastered the craft of matching horses with people to create safe and enjoyable partnerships. Horsemen who partner with…

Read More
0312_02

7 years ago

Solving Winter Water Woes

By Ritchie Industries Frozen buckets, heaters tossed out of troughs by playful horses, chipping through ice, hauling endless buckets to…

Read More
0902_02

7 months ago

Meet Method Ambassador Maddison Burkhart

Maddison was raised in northern California, where she grew up loving horses. While she didn’t have a horse of her…

Read More
0603_Tip

10 months ago

Training Tip: Teach Your Horse to Be Confident About Having His Feet Handled

It’s not your farrier’s responsibility to train your horse to stand quietly while his feet are worked on. Long before…

Read More