studiowvw
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- Sep 27, 2010
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A good day with Diesel today! I put the harness girth, crupper and breeching on him for the first time, plus the open bridle and bit for the first time. (mullen bit)
He took it remarkably well - had no anxiety about any of it.
I thought some people here would like to hear how it went
He has line driven with surcingle and halter/lines, he is now turned 3, this was the 5th day with him this week.
Unfortunately life and time zipping by meant he has only had a few times that I concentrated on him. Once around Christmas 2012 for about 10 days, about 15 minutes per time. That taught him a basic language and how to line drive in the halter and circle around me on line.
Then last fall I line drove him with Lacey about 6-8 times (1-2 miles at a time). That taught him to line drive and lead along with her, also to pick up his speed and not drag behind, also to trot on line.
He probably has another 10 random times that I actually took him out and groomed, or played on line, or did some walking down the road by himself.
When I started with him this week, he was reactive, opinionated and uncooperative - my first reaction was "where did my good boy go?" Fortunately I was able to bring him along with patience and humour rather than reacting myself by thinking he was "bad" and using correction or matching his reactiveness.
So here are some of the techniques I used to introduce the bit and harness parts to him - to avoid him feeling trapped, ill-used or stressed.
1. bit did not have reins - he just carried it - halter was over bridle so as not to affect the bit
2. before I strapped him into the crupper I put the lead line under his tail a few times. He wasn't clamping his tail or getting scared, so I buckled on the crupper. If he had been clamping his tail (a sign of unconfidence) I would have spent more time desensitizing for that.
3. He's had the lines dangling along his legs many times, so putting the breeching on him didn't mean much. I looped the holdbacks through the tugs so they wouldn't fall down and be stepped on.
4. He line drives ahead of me with either 1 line or 2. You can't expect a lot of finesse when using the halter and lines, but you also won't hurt his mouth by pulling on the bit while he is learning direction and other cues.
5. He was able to turn around to check out the harness - he had some curiosity about it while off and on, so I let him look at it.
6. He soon was dropping his head and snorting out (signs of relaxation) rather than scooting around reactively or standing with his head high (a tendency he has - sign of tension)
7. I didn't combine training parts - when doing the introduction to bit and harness, I didn't actually do line driving or yielding. I did send him out front and let him walk down the trail while on one line.
8. When I wanted to work on yielding, I took him back to the gates, took harness and bit off, and worked in halter and lines. Then I line drove him down the road to the neighbour's, which was what he likes to do, so it was a release and a reward without insisting on anything except going the direction I wanted. On the way home, it would have been more of a fight, so I simply collected up the reins and walked him home. A car came by and it didn't bother him. So the last part, going home, was relaxing too.
Pics - left pic he's investigating the harness, middle pic he is circling on line, right pic he is one-lining down the trail. Last pic he's line driving in halter, surcingle and lines down the road.
He took it remarkably well - had no anxiety about any of it.
I thought some people here would like to hear how it went
He has line driven with surcingle and halter/lines, he is now turned 3, this was the 5th day with him this week.
Unfortunately life and time zipping by meant he has only had a few times that I concentrated on him. Once around Christmas 2012 for about 10 days, about 15 minutes per time. That taught him a basic language and how to line drive in the halter and circle around me on line.
Then last fall I line drove him with Lacey about 6-8 times (1-2 miles at a time). That taught him to line drive and lead along with her, also to pick up his speed and not drag behind, also to trot on line.
He probably has another 10 random times that I actually took him out and groomed, or played on line, or did some walking down the road by himself.
When I started with him this week, he was reactive, opinionated and uncooperative - my first reaction was "where did my good boy go?" Fortunately I was able to bring him along with patience and humour rather than reacting myself by thinking he was "bad" and using correction or matching his reactiveness.
So here are some of the techniques I used to introduce the bit and harness parts to him - to avoid him feeling trapped, ill-used or stressed.
1. bit did not have reins - he just carried it - halter was over bridle so as not to affect the bit
2. before I strapped him into the crupper I put the lead line under his tail a few times. He wasn't clamping his tail or getting scared, so I buckled on the crupper. If he had been clamping his tail (a sign of unconfidence) I would have spent more time desensitizing for that.
3. He's had the lines dangling along his legs many times, so putting the breeching on him didn't mean much. I looped the holdbacks through the tugs so they wouldn't fall down and be stepped on.
4. He line drives ahead of me with either 1 line or 2. You can't expect a lot of finesse when using the halter and lines, but you also won't hurt his mouth by pulling on the bit while he is learning direction and other cues.
5. He was able to turn around to check out the harness - he had some curiosity about it while off and on, so I let him look at it.
6. He soon was dropping his head and snorting out (signs of relaxation) rather than scooting around reactively or standing with his head high (a tendency he has - sign of tension)
7. I didn't combine training parts - when doing the introduction to bit and harness, I didn't actually do line driving or yielding. I did send him out front and let him walk down the trail while on one line.
8. When I wanted to work on yielding, I took him back to the gates, took harness and bit off, and worked in halter and lines. Then I line drove him down the road to the neighbour's, which was what he likes to do, so it was a release and a reward without insisting on anything except going the direction I wanted. On the way home, it would have been more of a fight, so I simply collected up the reins and walked him home. A car came by and it didn't bother him. So the last part, going home, was relaxing too.
Pics - left pic he's investigating the harness, middle pic he is circling on line, right pic he is one-lining down the trail. Last pic he's line driving in halter, surcingle and lines down the road.