Folks on-line
Today is
Home
Place Ad
Place a Horse for Sale Ad
Place a Horse Wanted Ad
Place a Horse Property for Sale Ad
Place a Horse Trailer for Sale Ad
Place a Truck for Sale Ad
Place a Stallion Service Ad
Place a Tack Store Ad
Place a Hay for Sale Ad
Place a Rescue Dog Ad
Place a Services Provided Ad
List a Stolen Saddle
Auction my Horse
New!
Record my horse's information (Free)
Log in to my account
For Sale
Barrel Horses for Sale
Barrel Horses for Auction
Barrel Horses Wanted
Barrel Horses for Sale Videos
Horse Property for Sale
Horse Trailers for Sale
Trucks for Sale
Stallion Service
Saddles and Tack for Sale
Hay for Sale
Rescue Dogs
Stolen Saddles
Log in to my account
Stallions
Services
Testimonials
Events
Search for Barrel Horse Events
Place a Free Event Listing
Sanctioning Bodies
Find an Arena
List Your Arena Free
Live Webcasts
BHW Podcast Series
Live/Upcoming Webcasts
Forums
Barrel Racing Forum
Barrel Racers Directory
Trainers
In Memorium
BHW News
View My List
Contact
Contact Info
FAQ
BHW Banners
Custom Websites
Our Apps
Rate Page
Fraud Reporting
Find us on Facebook
🗂️ Forums
📷 Albums
🎨 Skins
🔍 Search
📝 Register
💻 Logon
You are logged in as a guest.
Logon
or
register
an account to access more features.
Other Forums
Horse Trailers
Trucks
Cutting
Reining
Roping
What to do with an over bendy horse?
Moderators:
luluwhit
,
gotothewhip
,
cindyt
,
crossspur
,
ForumAdmin
Jump to page :
1
2
Last activity 2014-01-27 3:47 PM
22 replies, 7900 views
View previous thread
::
View next thread
General Discussion
->
Barrel Talk
Flat
Threaded
Nested
hwh
Reg. Feb 2004
Posted
2014-01-27 1:53 PM
Subject:
RE: What to do with an over bendy horse?
Hero of the Year
Posts: 10767
Location: Haslet, Texas
Mullen mouthpiece for the runs. Keep soft and colected at home with your "at home" bit. Mine was a ring snaffle but ran in a rubber mullen.
↑ Top
↓ Bottom
geronabean
Reg. Sep 2003
Posted
2014-01-27 3:36 PM
Subject:
RE: What to do with an over bendy horse?
Queen Bean of Ponyland
Posts: 24953
Location: WYOMING
WYOTurn-n-Burn - 2014-01-27 2:45 PM
geronabean - 2014-01-27 1:39 PM
You need to teach him to engage his shoulder when he turns to get rid of noodle necking. Get that shoulder moving properly instead of leading in the turn and that will fix the drift also.
What kind of exercises do you do to teach them to engage their shoulders?
IDK if its a particular excercise or not but more in how someone asks/teaches them to bend in the first place. Some folks forget the shoulders when asking for bend and this results in noodle necking and drifting thru the turn letting the shoulder drift to the outside
(then the booty follows the shoulder
). I want my horses to give a little in the face and neck then follow thru with stepping around/across with their shoulders/front legs followed by their rib cage and hindend.
I teach them to do this by learning to move away from leg pressure in the shoulders and I combine that with rein pressure. My horses are all tought a beginning reining spin which is great for this. I think it can be enhanced using a counter arc somewhat, but only if the rider understands the process and how their legs and hands effect that shoulder My goal is to have that front end moving and engaged in the right direction during a turn so that the shoulder guides the turn more than the head/neck. Keeps noodles to a minimum.
So I teach a horse to move/cross over their front when I bump the shoulder in combo with outside and inside rein pressure. My hands collect and pick up the front, my "inside leg" is open and off the horse so that the shoulder can move into that open area. Baby steps... toward proper body usage in a turn.
So for me the bits mentioned DO help but if the horse isnt excuting a turn properly no bit will fix the problem completely.
Edited by geronabean 2014-01-27 3:43 PM
↑ Top
↓ Bottom
Three 4 Luck
Reg. Sep 2003
Posted
2014-01-27 3:47 PM
Subject:
RE: What to do with an over bendy horse?
Accident Prone
Posts: 22277
Location: 100 miles from Nowhere, AR
geronabean - 2014-01-27 3:36 PM
WYOTurn-n-Burn - 2014-01-27 2:45 PM
geronabean - 2014-01-27 1:39 PM
You need to teach him to engage his shoulder when he turns to get rid of noodle necking. Get that shoulder moving properly instead of leading in the turn and that will fix the drift also.
What kind of exercises do you do to teach them to engage their shoulders?
IDK if its a particular excercise or not but more in how someone asks/teaches them to bend in the first place. Some folks forget the shoulders when asking for bend and this results in noodle necking and drifting thru the turn letting the shoulder drift to the outside
(then the booty follows the shoulder
). I want my horses to give a little in the face and neck then follow thru with stepping around/across with their shoulders/front legs followed by their rib cage and hindend.
I teach them to do this by learning to move away from leg pressure in the shoulders and I combine that with rein pressure. My horses are all tought a beginning reining spin which is great for this. I think it can be enhanced using a counter arc somewhat, but only if the rider understands the process and how their legs and hands effect that shoulder My goal is to have that front end moving and engaged in the right direction during a turn so that the shoulder guides the turn more than the head/neck. Keeps noodles to a minimum.
So I teach a horse to move/cross over their front when I bump the shoulder in combo with outside and inside rein pressure. My hands collect and pick up the front, my "inside leg" is open and off the horse so that the shoulder can move into that open area. Baby steps... toward proper body usage in a turn.
Good explanation.
I was training one last year that knew how to bend her neck and fly sideways off an inside rein...talking about floating out of a turn! LOL She had to learn to listen to my body and put hers together, so I would counter arc her or half pass her into a turn following her shoulder without moving my hand
(counter arc left then turn right
), just changing the pressure of my legs and how I was sitting. Made a huge difference in her turns.
↑ Top
↓ Bottom
Jump to page :
1
2
Jump to forum :
General Discussion
----------------------
+ Barrel Talk
+ Teen Talk
+ Transportation
+ LET'S TALK NFR
+ Barrel Events
+ BHW Product Research Forum
+ Hay Forum
+ Sticky Forum
+ Live Events
+ Singles Corral
Search this forum
Printer friendly version
E-mail a link to this thread
Flat
Threaded
Nested
View previous thread
::
View next thread
© Copyright 2002-
BarrelHorseWorld.com All rights reserved including digital rights
Support - Contact
/
Log in to my account
'
(
Delete all cookies set by this site
)
Running
MegaBBS ASP Forum Software
© 2002-2025 PD9 Software
Registered to: Barrel Horse World