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April 2012

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Mount Up!

Teach your horse to be mannerly and obedient, so he'll stand still and allow you to mount easily, even on the trail.

If your horse walks off as you're trying to get on, chances are, you've taught him this frustrating behavior. If you've ever allowed your horse to start walking without a cue and as soon as your pockets hit the saddle, you've taught him that the cue to walk is you sitting on his back.

As the habit continues, your horse trains himself to walk as soon as you put a foot in the stirrup, then as soon as you approach with reins in your hand. While he thinks he's perfecting a cue, you get frustrated and feel unsafe when your horse walks away when your foot is stuck in the stirrup.

To fix this mounting-in-motion problem, top clinician/trainer Julie Goodnight will teach you how to retrain your horse to stand still for mounting. You'll make your horse think that walking off means work, while standing still is easy and worthy of praise. You'll also remind him that you dictate his every step. If you don't cue him to move, even after you mount, he should stand still and wait for orders from you, his herd leader.

Teaching your horse to stand still for mounting will boost your safety on the trail and your ability to trust your horse. If you need to mount or dismount in open spaces, your horse may think that your presence and riding gear means that it's time to take off at full speed; and if there's precarious footing, his unauthorized steps might cause him or you to slip.

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It's time to correct your horse's poor manners and establish yourself as your horse's leader. As his leader, only you decide when it's time to move. You make the decisions for your herd of two.

Goodnight says she expects all of her horses to stand still on a loose rein for mounting and until a rider gives a cue to move. A horse that stands still while his rider steps up and waits patiently for a cue to walk off shows that he has manners and knows his place in the herd. If he moves on his own, he doesn't respect his place in the herd and you as his leader.

Exercise Prep
Natural-horsemanship lesson: Teach your horse to stand still as you mount up.

Step #1: Prepare Your Horse

Why you need it on the trail: When you mount up in the open, it's especially important for your horse to patiently wait for your seat to land in the saddle, for you to get situated, and for a go-forward cue before he takes a step.

What you'll do: You'll prepare your horse for a ride in an enclosed arena, secure the reins, and attach a longe line to his bit. As you mount in slow motion, you'll watch for your horse to take a step. As soon as he does, you'll make him work by longeing him so that he'll associate taking a step with more work. Once your horse is standing still as you step toward him, you'll praise him for his obedience. Finally, you'll test his standing-still skills by mounting up on the trail.

What you'll need: An enclosed arena or large round pen; a longe line with a snap; a bridle with a snaffle bit and split or rope reins; your usual saddle and saddle pad.

Step #1. Prepare Your Horse
Outfit your horse in the tack listed above. Clip the longe line to the ring on the left side of the snaffle bit (Photo 1A). Neatly coil the excess longe line, and hold it in your left hand. Place the reins over his head or around his neck and secure them to the saddle so they won't come loose and trip your horse as you work (Photo 1B).

Stand your horse square, so his weight is evenly distributed on all four feet, and no leg is cocked. Then you won't inadvertently force him to move for balance when you mount. Note: If he isn't standing square when you mount and must take a step for balance, don't penalize him.

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