Confidence Building
On Sunday morning I took Boomer out for his second trail ride with the clicker. I had mostly talked about Blitz and how my mom and I were trying to teach him to control his emotions on our first ride with the clicker, well Boomer also came along for this training session where he learned to stand quietly after racing up a big hill, as well as how to walk home quietly. This time I went for a ride with my sister and her speed racer pony, Jet (you can only imagine how she got her name). Jet gives off a constant adrenaline that I think all the other horses can sense – she walks with urgency all the time and she only knows one speed and its FAST! Now this is perfectly fine for my sister, infact she can’t stand going slow – so they make the perfect pair, but for the rest of us we usually dread trail rides with Jet. Not only can our horses not keep up with her, but the adrenaline she puts off catches most horses off guard and prompts them into bucking and rearing fits when we begin moving with any sort of speed. Its like they feed off of her energy and they don’t know how to handle it – so most of them “explode”.
Anyway, the point is that now that I have begun riding with the clicker, Boomer did not “explode” once, infact he remembered each and every spot that we had stopped (and waited) the day before and began halting on his own. (I of course made him move onto a new spot of my choosing so he learned that it wasn’t about a specific spot, it was about listening to me). I can’t say I’m surprised at how quickly he caught on – I know he’s smart – but later he did actually surprise me at how much confidence the clicker training had given him in just one short ride.
Now if you read my earlier post you probably saw that on my trail ride I had lost my camera in the woods and had to go back for it – well this time it was the cell phone (From now on I am riding with a trail bag). After about 20 minutes of my sister and I riding up and down the same hills I couldn’t find it. So my sister decided to head back to the barn to get her phone so we could call it. I was a little nervous about having her leave me and my young Boomer alone in a wide open field, but it made more sense for only one of us to go back while the other kept looking. So as Jet rode off in the distance I was amazed at how Boomer just stood and waited for me to tell him to walk away from the direction of home. (If I had done this with him a few months ago I would of most certainly had to get off of him and it would of been highly probable that he would break free of my grasp and run home). It seemed the clicker training was helping him to build confidence – we proceeded to ride up and down the hills alone until my sister returned and we were able to find my phone. I was very proud of how Boomer handled himself in this situation, most horses wouldn’t have lasted more than a few minutes on their own. I’m going to continue to work with him using clicker training, and I’m sure we are going to be able to accomplish amazing things together.
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