Training Tip of the Week: Treat your personal space as an “invitation only” area.

To clarify a bit on last week's post because we received some questions: The only way the horse is allowed into your personal hula hoop space is if you invite him in. And you’ll only invite him into that four foot circle if you know you can get him out of it. Think of how you want your neighbors to treat you. You might like your neighbors, but you never want them to just barge into your house. You always want them to walk up to the door, knock and ask to come in. At that point, you can invite them in or you can ask them to come back at another time. You always want the option to turn them away. You don’t want your horse to act like a nosey neighbor and barge into your space. When I first meet a horse it’s very important for me to immediately establish my personal hula hoop space. If I can touch any part of the horse with my Handy Stick while my arm is stretched out, he is too close, and I’m in danger of getting hurt if he should react. I always play it safe until I know I have the horse’s attention and respect, I can control his feet and I can trust him before I invite him into my space. I never assume a horse is safe; I always make him prove it to me.

This weekly training tip is brought to you by Clinton Anderson and the Downunder Horsemanship team! If interested, you can also become a fan of our new Facebook page or follow us on Twitter and we’ll keep you in the loop on all Wahl Walkabout Tour and Clinic updates, training tips and other promotions including half-price tickets to any of our 2010 Tour stops for online followers. For general information, visit www.downunderhorsemanship.com. Thanks!

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Comment by Corrie Dunn on March 2, 2010 at 9:15pm
you have a very good point at the distance of safety,alot of us never think of the safety distance when we are around horses. I'm new at the horse stuff as I am just starting,I've only had horses for a couple of years now and am learning more all the time.I'm just learning to ride too, which is very interesting and scary at time. Looking forward to more of your safety tips. Thanks

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