Training Tip: Don’t Create a Cinchy-Horse Problem

1012_Tip

If thought isn’t given to how you do the cinch up, you can teach a horse to be “cinchy.” A “cinchy” or “cold-backed” horse has a tendency to overreact and possibly buck when pressure is applied around his belly or flank area. It’s normal for a horse to feel reactive whenever this area is squeezed tightly. Horses hate tight, narrow spaces or feeling claustrophobic, so when you wrap a rope or cinch around a horse’s belly and pull it tight, it can make the horse feel trapped and uncomfortable.

Horses are also protective of their bellies because they don’t have a lot of muscle or tissue there to protect their abdomens and organs. If a lion attacked a horse, for example, and the lion got even one claw dug into the horse’s abdominal muscles, the horse could potentially end up with a life-threatening infection even if he escaped. It’s part of horses’ self-preservation instinct to be very protective of their bellies, their hocks and legs down to their hooves, and from their ears forward.

Throwing the saddle on your horse and snugging the cinch up as tight as you can get it right away is a good way to create a cinchy horse. Think of it this way, imagine if when you first got out of bed in the morning someone grabbed a hold of your underwear and gave you a big wedgie. That’d make you pretty nervous about jumping out of bed. So always do the cinch up in stages and give your horse a chance to get used to the pressure.

Doing the cinch up just once can also fool you into thinking you’ve got it snug enough. While it might be tight when they first get in the saddle, it gradually loosens up as you ride the horse. Then you’ll find yourself in a wreck when the saddle slips underneath the horse’s belly.

The bottom line is to keep your horse’s comfort in mind and yourself out of danger by always following the rule of three when doing up the cinch.

Have a horsemanship question or looking for more training tips? Check out the No Worries Club.

More News

Back to all news

See All
1018_tip

10 years ago

Training Tip: The Best Way to End a Training Session

If you finish when the horse is frustrated or misbehaving, that’s what he’s going to remember the next day, and…

Read More
0103_Tip

4 years ago

Training Tip: Let Your Horse Digest Corrections

When you make a correction and your horse responds correctly, let him think about it. Literally stop and let the…

Read More
0101_Tip

8 years ago

Training Tip: Address Head Tossing, Part 2: The Horse is Sorry-Broke

If your horse is constantly tossing his head when you ride him and you’ve ruled out a health issue and…

Read More
FILES2f20152f112f1110_04.jpg.jpg

11 years ago

Intermediate Clinic Underway

We’re five days into Clinton’s annual Intermediate Clinic, and participants and their horses are working better together every day. Clinton…

Read More