> when mic sent the now infamous fox collar from wales she threw in one
> of their riding club newsletters, not really a newsletter, more like a
> small magazine, called "Set The Pace".  I wish 1.  more smaller
> organizations had publications like this and 2.  you could have access
> online to them.

Mic is a hoot!  Always with a good sense of humor!


> view, and a wonderful article on natural horsemanship by Ron Meredith
> who said some awesome things.

Superb!

Mic, here's another good article by Ron Meredith, which ties into the bit 
thread.  And altho it mentions runaway horses, we are not having as many 
bolting Icelandic Horses as we did several years ago, as we get away from 
the icelandic saddles, icelandic bits, nosebands, heavy contact, and start 
employing natural horsemanship with the icelandics.

Stopping a Runaway Horse
By Ron Meredith

Most people think you control a horse by controlling its head. That does not 
work. You control a horse by controlling its mind. And you control a horse's 
mind by controlling your own mind first. Mind control is what the training 
program we call heeding teaches our riders. They learn to keep their mind in 
the game stride by stride by stride by stride whether they are leading the 
horse from the barn to the arena, loading him on a trailer, riding him 
outdoors or competing at a show.

If a horse starts to run away, the first thing the rider should think about 
is riding the horse, not stopping the horse. Most of the methods proposed 
for stopping a runaway horse put you in more danger than you will be in if 
you just ride the horse until he tires or figures he's far enough away from 
whatever frightened him in the first place to think about stopping on his 
own.

If you try to stop a runaway horse by pulling hard on one rein to "double 
back" in a tight circle, you handicap a frightened horse two ways. First, 
you take away his ability to see where he is going. He is likely to tip into 
a ditch, slam into a fence, or run into a tree long before he stops. Second, 
pulling his head around to one side and locking it there creates real 
balance problems for the horse. The horse may stop but only because he has 
gone to his knees or has fallen sideways. The first thing you should do when 
a horse runs away is to allow the horse to see where he is going and keep 
his feet underneath him so he has the ability to carry you safely.

Trying to stop the horse with both reins does not work very well, either. A 
"cavalry stop" involves bracing the reins against the horse's neck with one 
hand to get some leverage while pulling both reins through the braced hand 
and up. Or some people bridge the reins with both hands about halfway up on 
the horse's neck then slide the bridge down toward the withers to crank the 
horse's jaw in. The problem here is that pressure by itself has no real 
meaning until you and the horse have agreed to its meaning. With a leverage 
bit plus all this bracing you might be able to exert several hundred pounds 
of pressure against the horse's jaw. But to a horse, that specific pressure 
has no specific association with stopping. To a frightened horse, the 
extreme pressure simply becomes something else to escape.

To make things worse, if you hang on the reins or tighten your arms or lock 
your back or clamp your legs, any move the horse makes uses your own braced 
muscles to bounce you loose. The horse can also pull you forward over his 
head easily.

So the first thing to think about when a horse runs away-always-is riding 
him, not stopping him. You need to have a mental picture of riding, of 
moving, with the horse. You need to control your mind and focus on 
problem-solving thoughts rather than allowing panic-driven thoughts to run 
away with your mind.

The first thing you want to focus on is maintaining your balance. If the 
saddle has a horn or grab strap, it is OK to take a hold of it to help with 
balance but be sure to do it with a loose arm. Tight muscles will magnify 
the horse's bounce and put you out of the saddle. When the horse first 
accelerates, you may need to lean forward a bit to stay in balance. But you 
should recenter yourself as soon as possible. If you keep your upper body 
upright, you will not go off over the horse's shoulder if he makes a sharp 
turn or over his neck if he drops his head.

Rhythm is the basic skill on both the riding tree and the training tree. And 
rhythm creates relaxation. So after balance you should focus on rhythm so 
that you can relax and get back in time with the horse. You can start by 
focusing on the rhythm of your breathing, then on the rhythm of the horse's 
surges.

When you are in rhythm with the horse, you can begin squeezing a little each 
time the horse surges then relaxing to allow the stride. This squeeze and 
release puts you in time with the horse and begins to put the horse's 
attention back on you. If the horse has not already stopped of his own 
accord, you are now in a position to begin using the rhythmic motion of your 
aids to help the horse relax. Gradually you can take back control and begin 
shaping the horse's strides instead of just riding them. And now you can 
safely stop the horse with the full corridor of aids he understands as 
"stop."

If someone is swatting a bee around their head with one hand and someone 
accidentally crushes their other hand in a car door, that person is going to 
forget about the bee. The pain in their fingers will quickly override any 
anxiety they had about a bee sting.

When a horse panics about some real or imagined threat and starts running 
away from it, a rider that panics and clamps and puts hundreds of pounds of 
pressure on his jaw quickly becomes the car door instead of the bee. You 
become a bigger problem than the one the horse was worrying about in the 
first place.

Heeding is about learning how to become the safest, most comfortable place 
to be in the horse's mind, the place he can always trust to be the same the 
same the same. So when things fall apart, your goal is to get back to being 
the safest place to be for the horse so he can forget about whatever 
panicked him in the first place. You do that by controlling your mind. It is 
not up to the horse to take care of you, it is up to you to take care of the 
horse.

Lack of confidence contributes to panic thoughts so if you are not confident 
around your horse, you need to work on that. Heeding groundwork helps riders 
learn how to use rhythm to relax their horse, to show the horse that this 
relaxed state is a place that is really nice to be, and then keeps that 
feeling going between them as they progress up the training and riding 
trees.

If you do not feel confident that you can ride a runaway horse, you should 
back up on the riding tree to the place where your own rhythm or relaxation 
or balance or whatever starts to fall apart. As you master each of the 
riding tree skills in order, you will gain the confidence to stay in control 
of your mind whenever the horse goes out of his.

______________________

Judy
http://icehorses.net
http://clickryder.com 

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