His left lead is wonderful, but his right not os much. I make sure I am very calm but firm when I ask him to canter, in which I hardly ask him to very easily. But, he becomes out of control and hard to maintain in which his canter is very fast and nerve wracking. It a shame, because he has such great potential, and as well is a very good looking horse with great bloodline. This video surely gives me a better idea on possibly try to the fix the problem. Thank you so much for posting this.
Wow. I have a 7 year old quarter horse who never fully developed well into his canter. I try to get him to settle down and make it relaxing and enjoyable for him, but it seems that when we go into canter, it's a hard process by by slowly building up to that momentum. He grows anxious and nervous in the canter, making it uneasy for him to collect well.
barrelhorserider7, in my experience in loping circles, i explain it to people in a different manner. If the outside leg of the direction you are circling hits first, then you are in the correct lead. So if you are loping to the right, you look down at the shoulders and see if the left leg lands first which is followed by the right leg "leading" that left leg step. So my easy way of knowing if you are in the correct lead is to see if the outside hits first.
This guy does explain my pet peeve of moving the hip in to lope very well. It makes some sense now! Thank you guy. Although I still disagree, I believe we need to ultimately make the horse straight so he can step more under his body with the inside hind leg as well.
whichwayyougoing1234- IF you hear he is correcting this as he is going. by keeping the pressure of his leg against the horse until he relaxes therefore he is address the problem.
When cantering in a circle to the right, the leading leg should be the right front leg. The footfall pattern for the canter, on the right lead, is left hind, right hind and left front simultaneously, then right front. The opposite foot pattern represents the left lead as follows: right hind, left hind and right front simultaneously, left front.
Anytime a trainer allows the behavioral issues seen in this video, the trainer is condoning and encouraging the behavior. It will get worse.
If you didn't catch it, watch for the ears and tail as the horses "curses" at the rider. Finally one can catch the horse threatening to bite, buck, and kick at the trainer. Eventually the horse will become so hateful in his attitude, folks won't want to take the risk of being his next victim.
But, if you'd watched the other videos you'd know the horse is green and is being trained in these videos ; these demonstrations are about training the horse, not training a rider. If you listen to the commentary, the rider explains exactly what he is doing to work the bad behaviour out of the horse.
Gary Stauffer is the presenter in this video. He along with Monte Stauffer presented on Fundamental Training for Horse & Rider at the 2007 Equestrian Academy at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. They are both Extension educators there. This is just a segment of their presentation.
Thanks for the awesome video, do you think I could apply the same type thing to me English training system?
earlrocks96 1 month ago
His left lead is wonderful, but his right not os much. I make sure I am very calm but firm when I ask him to canter, in which I hardly ask him to very easily. But, he becomes out of control and hard to maintain in which his canter is very fast and nerve wracking. It a shame, because he has such great potential, and as well is a very good looking horse with great bloodline. This video surely gives me a better idea on possibly try to the fix the problem. Thank you so much for posting this.
soullover123456 1 year ago
Wow. I have a 7 year old quarter horse who never fully developed well into his canter. I try to get him to settle down and make it relaxing and enjoyable for him, but it seems that when we go into canter, it's a hard process by by slowly building up to that momentum. He grows anxious and nervous in the canter, making it uneasy for him to collect well.
soullover123456 1 year ago
barrelhorserider7, in my experience in loping circles, i explain it to people in a different manner. If the outside leg of the direction you are circling hits first, then you are in the correct lead. So if you are loping to the right, you look down at the shoulders and see if the left leg lands first which is followed by the right leg "leading" that left leg step. So my easy way of knowing if you are in the correct lead is to see if the outside hits first.
skipa27 1 year ago
This guy does explain my pet peeve of moving the hip in to lope very well. It makes some sense now! Thank you guy. Although I still disagree, I believe we need to ultimately make the horse straight so he can step more under his body with the inside hind leg as well.
UltimateDQ 2 years ago
whichwayyougoing1234- IF you hear he is correcting this as he is going. by keeping the pressure of his leg against the horse until he relaxes therefore he is address the problem.
ewagner1987 2 years ago
im confused... is the right lead the inside leg, or the right leg( that extends farther?)?? please help asap
thanks,
barrelhorserider7
barrelhorserider7 2 years ago
When cantering in a circle to the right, the leading leg should be the right front leg. The footfall pattern for the canter, on the right lead, is left hind, right hind and left front simultaneously, then right front. The opposite foot pattern represents the left lead as follows: right hind, left hind and right front simultaneously, left front.
eXHorses 2 years ago
@barrelhorserider7 The correct lead is the inside fore leg extending farther and hitting last.
wildafricansafari 2 years ago
I am so glad I have found these videos. They have helped me train my 10 year old qh that is for sale.
NAYRiders12 2 years ago
Good explanations, but....
Anytime a trainer allows the behavioral issues seen in this video, the trainer is condoning and encouraging the behavior. It will get worse.
If you didn't catch it, watch for the ears and tail as the horses "curses" at the rider. Finally one can catch the horse threatening to bite, buck, and kick at the trainer. Eventually the horse will become so hateful in his attitude, folks won't want to take the risk of being his next victim.
whichwayyougoing1234 2 years ago
Yeah, I noticed too...
zipposrevelation 2 years ago
But, if you'd watched the other videos you'd know the horse is green and is being trained in these videos ; these demonstrations are about training the horse, not training a rider. If you listen to the commentary, the rider explains exactly what he is doing to work the bad behaviour out of the horse.
nags2bitches 2 years ago
he's a great teacher!! i would like to see the whole presentation!!
englishwesternrider 2 years ago 6
How do you teach your horse to move his hindquarters? like he did in the video without barely movin his front legs....
cuntrygurl208 2 years ago 2
Does anyone know if he has any training videos out or will be doing more clinics. thanks. He is the best teacher!
judyincanada 2 years ago 2
I have really enjoyed these tapes. This cowboy is a very good teacher and explains things so they are quite easy to understand. Thanks
colshoe
colshoe 3 years ago 5
This has got to be one of the most understandable explanations for leads I've seen yet. Thank you!
woolyfsh 3 years ago 2
I like this guy too. It's hard to find someone who is professional and provides this kind of education on Youtube. Thanks!
Chicklitz 3 years ago 3
not only is he good.
he teaches well, which is a rarity. more from this man, please, what's his name?
tallyfolly 3 years ago
Gary Stauffer is the presenter in this video. He along with Monte Stauffer presented on Fundamental Training for Horse & Rider at the 2007 Equestrian Academy at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. They are both Extension educators there. This is just a segment of their presentation.
eXHorses 3 years ago