HOW PATTERNS CAN GET YOU INTO TROUBLE

 By Ron Meredith
 President, Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre

 WAVERLY, WV--When you work in predictable patterns that create
feelings of rhythm and relaxation, your horse begins to trust that you
are a comfortable, safe place to be. You never surprise or startle the
horse as you groom or lead or load him into a trailer or work under
saddle because you always use a predictable, calm, rhythmic approach
to whatever you do when you are with him.

 Predictability does not mean that you always ask the horse to do
certain things certain ways and never vary those patterns. The feeling
you create between you and the horse is the part that must be
consistent. The horse must feel that you are consistent and
predictable when you show, ask, or tell him things. He can rely on you
to be the same no matter where the two of you go or what you do. You
always work around him in a rhythmic, relaxed, calm way. You always
breath, scratch, brush, saddle or whatever in a relaxed and rhythmic
way. You apply your riding aids in a rhythmic, relaxed, consistent
way. Whenever you work with the horse, you always keep your temper and
you always make the horse feel like being with you is the safest place
he can be.

 Always doing the same thing the same way can create predictable
performance patterns. Sometimes that can be a good thing. Sometimes
not. Instructors prize an oldie oldie school horse that knows its job.
The horse will pack a beginner around the ring and perform perfectly
regardless of the rider's mistakes. Years ago, we had a horse named
Mama. She knew the show ring drill so well that we rented her out at
shows to other people who wanted to ride and get a ribbon and go home
happy.

 Mama's understanding of predictable patterns was a desirable thing
when she was packing those so-so riders. But it could have been a
problem if a really good rider had taken her into a class and asked
her to pay attention to a new pattern set by the rider's aids. The
same thing can happen when a dressage rider tries to ride a new test
after drilling a particular one so often that the horse does it on
autopilot.

 If your horse gets accustomed to workouts that always last the same
amount of time, or that always take place in the same arena, or that
always involve the same buddy going along for the ride, he will notice
when the program changes. The result may be confusion or confrontation
or something in between depending on his temperament.

 Predictable performance patterns can also lead to harm when you do
not consider activity drive. Heredity plays a role in a horse's
everyday activity drive. Hot-blooded horses like Arabs and
Thoroughbreds display more natural activity drive than cold-blooded
horses. Horses at play demonstrate their natural activity drive by
practicing their defense mechanisms like running, bucking and rearing.
How long a horse will play and practice depends partly on heredity and
partly on his physical condition.

 As we bring any horse into better and better physical condition so he
can play games like dressage or jumping or reining or cutting, we
increase the level of his activity drive. After a horse exercises, his
activity drive builds for approximately 3 to 5 days. After that, his
activity drive and physical condition start to drop off.

 If you take a horse that has just been standing around all winter to
a strange place and turn him loose, he may display a huge amount of
activity drive for a short time. But because he is not in good
physical condition, he will not run and posture for very long. If you
take a horse in top physical condition and leave him in a stall for
three days, when you finally come to take him out, his activity drive
makes him feel like playing longer and harder.

 Some people create a predictable turnout pattern that works against
them. They always turn the horse loose to spend activity drive before
they saddle up and ride. Or they always take the horse off the trailer
and turn him out when they arrive at a showground after a long haul.
You invite injuries when you turn a horse with a high level of
activity drive loose to buck and play before his muscles warm up. If
you are showing the horse, he may spend so much of his activity drive
playing that he does not have enough left to compete well.

 Some people are afraid of their horse's activity drive so they want
the horse to spend it before they get in the saddle. They way they go
about it, however, does not create a predictable feeling that they are
the safest place for the horse to be. They put the horse in a round
pen or arena and then they do something to startle the horse and get
him going. They might make a loud noise shaking rocks in a plastic
jug. Or they might use aggressive body language or chase him around
with a whip to wear him out. From the horse's perspective, this is a
confrontation and the handler is an aggressor. The horse learns that
when he is turned loose in an arena, he had better prepare to escape.
As a predictable pattern, this ruins any feeling of camaraderie
between handler and horse.

 Instead, you want to set up a situation that gives the horse the
feeling that you are his best friend. You heed him to the arena in a
rhythmic and relaxed way, walk in, stand beside him while you unhook
the lead, then just back away and allow the horse to do what he wants
to do. Most horses will smell around a little bit and look for any
real danger before they decide whether they want to play or just
observe and walk around. It all depends on how they feel that day.

 Your job is to just stay in the center and do whatever the horse
does. Whether the horse just walks or starts to run and jump, you just
mirror what he is doing from the center, playing the game his way, so
he gradually brings his attention back to you. When you feel like the
horse has settled, he is ready to play the game your way. So you can
start asking him to trot when you "trot" or stop when you stop or
whatever. You play with the horse, he checks in with you, you play
some more, and so on. You build a relationship with the horse rather
than chasing him around.

 Now the consistent pattern is that you are safe to be around and the
horse can check in with you about how he should feel about a
situation. That is something positive you can build on when you get in
the saddle and go to work.

 Whenever you work with your horse, you are developing patterns of
relating that will carry over into everything else you do together.
The purpose of those patterns is not to put the horse on autopilot but
to create a consistent expectation or feeling in the horse that you
are always a safe, calm place to be. If you want your horse to be your
best buddy, develop predictable patterns of handling and riding that
create a feeling of trust.
____________________

Judy

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