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How
young can you break a horse to ride?
Although racehorses are typically broken at two years old,
we feel it's better to wait until the horse is 3 or 4 years
old before backing it. The horse is then stronger and a
little more mature.
Why is it called "breaking"?
Training horses used to be a brute-force method that often
involved tying up one leg, strapping on a saddle and forcing
a wild and terrified horse to do your bidding. Nowadays
we understand the horse better and most people take the
process more slowly and gain the trust of the horse in the
process, forming a longer bond and with less risk of damaging
the horse both physically and mentally. Whatever process
is used, it's still called "breaking".
When
is a horse too old to break?
Never. An old horse may take longer to learn the basics,
and you may have to spend more time "untraining"
badly learned habits, but unlike the old dog, a horse can
learn new tricks at any age. An old horse may be otherwise
unsuitable for riding however, due to injury or disease.
When
can I start jumping my horse?
Generally we advise to wait a year after initial breaking
in order to build a relationship and get the horse used
to riding out and settled. So if a horse was broken at 4,
start jumping training at 5, and so on. As with most things
it depends on the horse and your own ability, so a little
leeway is fine.
How
soon should I halter a new foal?
You really ought to halter your new foal straight away.
We take our new born foals out into a small well fenced
paddock on the 2nd day of their life, and they start to
get used to their halter gently, with a hand on his rump
to carefully guide him forward, it will take a bit of care
and persuasion and you need someone to lead mum too. Just
lead the foal steadily behind the mare and turn them out
for about an hour, then lead them in. The period you leave
them out (weather permitting, don't put them out in the
cold and wet) can be increased little by little.
Is
it true that a horse can hold up to 25% of their own weight?
Not exactly. There is no hard and fast rule to what weight
each individual horse can carry. Consider each horse's capacity
on an individual basis.
Am
I too heavy for my horse?
Maybe... Sorry, but because each horse is an individual
and so is each rider, it is impossible for us to give you
an answer without knowing the horse itself.
Is
shouting a way to solve things?
No. It is not fair and it wont help reschool your horse.
Horses are very receptive and if you are angry or frustrated
they will pick it up from you and wind up even more. Telling
off a horse that is scared of something will only reaffirm
that it has every right to be scared, if you have a spooky
horse the trick is to stay calm and don't react (whatever
it does) talk to it (calmly)use your voice, legs and seat
to encourage it past whatever it is spooking at. If it is
genuinely scared sometimes pausing to look at the object
will reassure it that there is nothing to be scared of.
Is
it a good idea to break a colt if you plan to breed from
it in the future?
It would depend on your intentions for the horse, although
breaking usually helps to give more control to the rider
or handler in addition to normal headcollar-breaking and
handling training so in general it would be a good idea.
There
is no reason why a stallion can't be ridden and be bred
from.
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