Boomer in Training
I decided to post a video I took today while I was working with Chesapeake Boomerang or Boomer. I wish I had a video from when I first brought him home, because the difference in him is amazing. Boomer is a 2003 registered Chincoteague Pony (which makes him 6 years old currently), I still consider him to be very young and inexperienced. When I got him last year he was broke to ride, but he still needed (and still does) a lot more improvement. Unfortunately where I keep him right now there is no ring, and the only area that is remotely useable is a semi-flat open field, that also floods. So when I first started riding him in this area, lets just say our rides together were far from calm. I was dealing with bucks and rearing and I would have never been able to ride him alone.
But from this video (sorry for the far-away shot, it was difficult to film by myself) you can see that I have a much different horse. It was a little swampy so we had some sticky spots – and this is mostly why I am only trotting him. But incase its too far away to tell – I am working on getting Boomer to stop with his hind end under him, I then proceed to ask him to back up and spin on his haunches. It might be hard to tell but I am actually barely using rein pressure, I’m instead over exaggerating my seat and leg movements, hence why I throw my legs forward for the halt and why I lean way back when asking him to back up. Eventually when Boomer’s responses to these signals are much quicker I will not over-exaggerate them as much.
After watching this video you may be asking yourself, I thought she used reward-based training methods to teach her horses, so where are the treats? And my response to that is that I don’t use it for everything, or all the time for that matter, simply because I don’t need to (again a common misconception among people is that you always need treats when riding if you use reward based methods). When I first got Boomer one of the first things I did with him was teach him to target a ball, shake hands, stand on a pedestal and give me a kiss. For these “tricks” I used clicker training (with treats) to train him. Once I had a language going with Boomer (I ask you something, you figure out what it is, you get rewarded) we had a solid way to communicate. So when I took to riding Boomer, and for example wanted to teach him to back up, all I did was sit way far back and give light taps on the rein. As I waited patiently (sometimes for a very long time) for even a step, Boomer was constantly thinking about what he had learned with me before (I ask you something, you figure out what it is, you get rewarded), so when that first step came Boomer got a great big pat and good boy. (All my ponies learn that good boy/girl means job well done – since all my treats are accompanied by this in the beginning). He didn’t need a treat right then, the “good boy” was reward enough for him. The promise of something good when he figures it out is all he needs, I truly believe horses thrive off of our approval and they simply just want to please us. Its in their nature to be “part of the herd” so to speak.
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