Teaching Your Equine To Respect Your Dominance

Submitted by: Annabelle Cabella

Horse training involves a lot of things especially teaching the horse appropriate ground manners.

Proper ground manners is a thing that your horse needs to learn. The success of your venture as a horseman will start in training the equine suitable ground manners. It cannot be stressed enough that determination and positive mindset is necessary in teaching ground manners.

This also goes to the horse. A calm equine will be much easier to train so you would always want the horse to be at ease when working with it. Instantly start teaching your horse when you notice that its head is lowered and eyes are hooded as these are signs of submissiveness. Have your training at another time if your horse is showing otherwise. It would also be a good idea to determine why your horse is behaving or feeling anxious.

Dominance and Respect

The equine will never respect you on the saddle if it has not even learned to respect you on the ground. Most domesticated animals love to be a follower if you know how to assert yourself without scaring them. Creating a symbiotic partnership with your horse, where you both win, can be a simple task. Don t ever forget this when you are with your horse.

Young horses are a playful bunch. They re easily distracted and will surely test you on the ground. They are driven by fun and pleasure. They will play in every chance they get but at some point, you have to show that you are boss and the more dominant in the partnership.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_rQk9dFFXnA[/youtube]

Never allow the horse to boss you around. At first, the animal will consider it play but allowing it at all times will make the animal have the impression that you are weak. A horse that is pushy is never going to respect you and respect is one of the most important things in natural horsemanship.

Show the horse that you are the Alpha. If you allow the equine to be aggressive and bully you, forget your training because you can never reach your horsemanship aspirations with a belligerent equine. If the horse will not respect your space, you cannot make your horse move the way you want it to.

Signs of docility and submissiveness

Giving the right body signals and knowing the animal s body language is an important part of communication. Before the training, make sure that you see signs of equine submission.

Here are some signs to look for:

* Head is lowered

* Ears are back and does not look alert

* Taking deep breaths

* Licking of the lips

* A cocked leg

There is no better time to train your equine than when it is at its most comfortable state. The signs stated above are exactly what you want your horse to exhibit before training time.

You must know what pleasures your equine because you can use them as reward every time the equine has done a great job. If your equine likes to be scratched between the ears, give it the treat it deserves. Always keep in mind that when teaching your equine ground manners, do it via positive reinforcement and not with fear factor.

About the Author: If you want to learn more about

horse manners

and how to teach them like a true horseman, visit

EasyHorseTraining.com

. The website provides the best resources and horse training videos that you and your equine will love!

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