Find It on the No Worries Club: Introducing Spurs

NWCfind

To train a horse that’s both responsive and relaxed, you have to balance impulsion exercises with suppling exercises. Too much of either one is no good. “If you focus on only impulsion exercises, your horse will readily move forward, but he’ll likely be stiff and heavy. If you only work on suppling exercises, your horse will be soft and light, but when you ask him to move forward, he’ll cop an attitude,” Clinton explains.

When he begins to work on suppling exercises with a horse, Clinton introduces spurs as a training aid. “Spurs are nothing more than an extension of your leg, just as the Handy Stick is an extension of your arm when you’re doing groundwork,” he says. “Spurs are only to be used to move the horse’s five body parts and to soften and supple his body. They should never be used to get a horse to speed up or to make up for shortcomings in a horse’s training.”

In the summer 2018 No Worries Journal, Clinton explains why or why not a rider should use spurs and how to safely introduce using them to a horse. Read the article now by logging on to the Downunder Horsemanship app or the No Worries Club website.

A complete library of our quarterly No Worries Journals is available for viewing and downloading on the No Worries Club website and the Downunder Horsemanship app. If you’re not a club member, learn more about the many benefits of being a club member and join our community on our website.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0808_02

8 years ago

Wanted: Your Horse

We’re gearing up for our last Walkabout Tour of 2017, and we are on the hunt for two more horses…

Read More
FILES2f20152f082f0811_03.jpg.jpg

10 years ago

Frankfort, Kentucky Fundamentals Clinic

Great horsemen possess three qualities: feel, timing and experience. The only way to get good feel and timing is through…

Read More
FILES2f20142f092f0909a_Tip.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Training Tip: A Good Stud Makes a Great Gelding

One of the best things my mentor Gordon McKinlay ever told me as an apprentice was “If he’s a good…

Read More
0423_02

2 years ago

Give Your Young Horse the Best Start

If you’re welcoming a foal or working with a young horse this spring, we’ve got the training essentials you need…

Read More