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Bringing a horse back to driving...

Last post 04-09-2008 7:25 PM by goodhors. 2 replies.
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  • 04-08-2008 8:35 AM

    Bringing a horse back to driving...

    In a few months, I am going to be starting a Mini in harness again after several years of not being driven.  She is a very level headed horse and I am used to driving, but I was wondering if anyone had any tips to help get her back in harness sucessfully.  Unfortunately, I don't have any information about what she did before she came to our barn, but I was told that she was well-broke to drive.

    Thanks in advance for any tips!!  Big Smile

  • 04-09-2008 11:25 AM In reply to

    Re: Bringing a horse back to driving...

    Sorry, I am of no help.  Don't know a thing about driving, but would it be helpful to long line her first to get a feel for how well she responds to the bit and maybe drag a few things to see how she handles pulling?  Just a shot in the dark.  I know there are several people in the forum that can help.  They should have some great advice for you!

    Colty - Paint gelding
    Sadie - Pinto mare
    Stormy - Mustang/Appaloosa gelding
    Brandy - Paint mare
    Doc - Paint Shetland gelding
    Cash - Paint gelding
    7 dogs
    2 cats
    lots of bulls and cows
  • 04-09-2008 7:25 PM In reply to

    Re: Bringing a horse back to driving...

    Not sure how familiar you are with driving. I will write like you have not much experience. 

    I would start the horse on long lines as already suggested.  Do you have a harness and cart?  You want to drive the animal with the lines going along his sides,  not thru the rein terrets on his back.  He can turn under the lines up high, get tangled up.  Lines down on his sides are like shafts, he stays between them and can't quickly turn to tangle.  Buckling the loops that carry the shafts on harness saddle down to the overgirth, can give you a place to run the long lines thru.  This will keep the lines in place pretty well.

    Doris Ganton has a book out, which I think is titled "Teaching the Horse to Drive".  Often available used on Ebay, or locally from the Michigan Horse Drawn Vehicle Association, at :

    http://016f785.netsolhost.com/board.htm

    I think Nancy Caulfield has the books.  You could give her a call, which I think is faster than Email.  She also has minis.

    Not sure where in MI you are located, but there are several beginner clinics in the MHDVA Calendar that could be helpful to you.  All are being put on by knowledgable folks.   Not  MHDVA events, they just track all driving stuff to keep us informed of activities.

    I would start and progress the animal like it is untrained.  Get it used to YOUR commands out on the lines.  Maybe the original handler said "giddy-up or walk-on or just clucked" to start him moving.  Have him responding correctly to you, before advancing.  Whoa and stand still is the BEST driving gait, make sure he is VERY good at it.  Willing to stop immediately from any gait, in any situation.

      Use your whip with gentle touches, to aid animal to respond correctly, move forward, step sideways when asked/touched with stick.  Think of whip like your riding legs.  A good whip is light in your hands, easy to hold and balance.  You need enough lash to reach him out there on the lines, so he doesn't give you the "horse laugh" at requests.  I find regular lunge whips to be very heavy, and use my driving whips with a long string as lash.  Much lighter to manage AND still reaches the horse out there.

    After he is good on the lines, listening, then you can advance to dragging a tire, then on to dragging poles as shafts.  All the steps needed to get ready to hitch.  A refresher course is always good after a long time off.  Time together will make you both confident in each other as well.

    A well-trained animal will progress quickly and show you how well he understands the directions.  If he doesn't understand you, it is better to teach   him on the lines than in a vehicle.  All drivers don't have the same expectation levels in their driving animals.  Some want a leisurely response, while others expect a crisp reaction to commands, no delays.

    My animals have to reach a high standard, because I want them VERY reliable in all situations.  This is a much higher level than when I was younger, thought I was immortal then!! 

    Resist the urge to hurry.  Minis are very  accepting in most cases, can fool you in how much they truly know.  They need good basics, to be solid, just like taller animals.   We start with open bridles, then alternate the blinkers now and again, so he knows what they are.  I want ours seeing everything we are doing up to hitching.  At the second cart hitching he is permanently then in blinker bridle to focus his attention forward.  He knows what is going on, nothing to be scared of.  Blinkers make him reliant on the word commands, he can't read my body language anymore, no anticipating or "helping" his driver.

    Don't overload him, so he won't try to move the load.  They do  seem to give up easily.  Always let him be successful in moving what you ask.  We do the same with our young horses, slowly increasing his working loads.  Makes him brave because we don't let him fail when asking him to go forward.  

    Your animal is probably not fit yet, so build up his body in the training.  Don't let him get too tired to listen during training.  Short sessions to start, build on it.

    Good animals are built slowly.  Daily work, 3-5 days a week, is the best way to progress quickly.  Short sessions so you both are having fun.  This is not a 30-60 days training series.  He needs to be confident, solid so you can rely on him. 


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