Horse & Rider

Improve On-Trail Behavior

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Sweeten your trail horse’s outlook and cure a variety of trailrelat­ed problems with the “50-foot trail ride.”

Is your horse nervous on the trail? Pokey on the way out? Overeager on the way back? Always wanting to stop or turn?

If so, you need my “50foot trail ride.” It’s a simple exercise that works with your horse’s psychology to remove his natural reluctance to be away from “home”—whether home is the barn or the trailer.

It’s a simple concept: You practice trail riding by going a short distance, then turning around and returning to your starting place. Then you ride back out, going farther this time, then turning back again. Over time, you increase the distance you travel on each start-over, gradually reducing your horse’s anxiety about leaving home.

Why This Works

This exercise teaches your horse to have confidence that he will be able to go home at some point. Returning home is something horses often obsess about. When they pass their “I can’t stand it!” threshold, they begin the balky or rushy behavior that can ruin a trail ride.

By repeatedly turning back for home, you short-circuit this worry cycle. Over time, that worry is replaced with confidence as your horse realizes he’s not actually leaving home forever.

Think of dropping your child off at day care. You wouldn’t set him down and say you’ll be back in nine hours. No, you start by leaving him for five minutes, then 10, then half an hour. You increase the time incrementa­lly as your child develops trust that you always will come back.

For your horse, you’re resetting his tension level to zero every time you turn back. Eventually, he’s no longer thinking about wanting to go back. He’s not tense or concerned, because he’s learned he’ll be going home for certain at some point.

Key to Success

The most challengin­g aspect of this exercise is keeping the right attitude. You can’t think of this training as “something you have to do before you get to go on your trail ride.” You must think of it as your trail ride.

Or, as my friend and equestrian mindset coach Jane Pike says, “If you’re thinking about the end result of the work you’re doing, you’re not doing the work.”

Look at it this way: If you went for an hour-long trail ride, you wouldn’t get 50 feet out and be thinking, “Oh, I can’t wait to be on my trail ride!” You’re already on it. And even when you’re almost home, you’d still be on the trail ride—you’re not finished until you’re all the way back.

In the same vein, when you’re first starting out and then turning back, over and over, you should consider all of that as part of your trail ride.

How? Stay in the moment. Remain present. Be thinking, “Hey, we’re having a great time on this trail ride!” That gives you a relaxed, positive ener

of it as training. Think, I’m trail riding!

Step 2: Go Farther

Here I’ve ridden again to the point where I turned around, only now I’ll keep going a little farther. Increase the distances proportion­ally a bit more as you go along. For example, for your second time out, you may go just half again as far as you went the first time. So if you went 100 feet the first time, you’ll go 150 feet this time.

Then the next time, you might go double what you went the previous time—so 300 feet instead of 150. And so on. The distances start to increase in a hurry.

Again, always adjust the distances as need be so that you’re turning back before your horse starts to fret.

Step 3: Turn Again

to work through the “no.”

The first time you try the 50-foot trail ride, you may get only 100 yards up the trail all told. But you’ll find it easy to go much farther the next time you try it.

Step 4: Keep Going

Here I’m making it out farther still, and my horse is still calm and happy. Repeat this exercise over different days, and you’ll find you’re able to go farther and farther between turnbacks. Soon you’ll be out there having the trail ride you’ve always wanted—on a happy, relaxed horse!

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 ??  ?? Australian clinician and reiner Warwick Schiller lives in Hollister, California. He’s an NRHA reserve world champion and represente­d Australia at the 2010 and 2018 FEI World Equestrian Games. He solves horse problems by changing the rider’s perspectiv­e. Learn more about Schiller and find his clinics, books, and videos at warwicksch­iller.com.
Australian clinician and reiner Warwick Schiller lives in Hollister, California. He’s an NRHA reserve world champion and represente­d Australia at the 2010 and 2018 FEI World Equestrian Games. He solves horse problems by changing the rider’s perspectiv­e. Learn more about Schiller and find his clinics, books, and videos at warwicksch­iller.com.

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