GreyCoast
Well-Known Member
I saw some comments a few weeks or months ago about halting a horse at a jump teaches the horse to stop. An unwanted type of stop, not the you-asked-for-it-so-here-it-is type
. This is an exercise I've used extensively on 3 horses and not had a problem, helped convert one stopper even. Now that's quite limited experience, so I'd like to gather some more anectdata 
I've either had instructors start the exercise, praise me for halting when the horse runs through the hand or not say anything at all, so I'm guessing they didn't have problems with the exercise either.
For me the theory is very simple. Go and stop. It's the first thing the horse learns undersaddle and I don't see why some coloured poles changes anything. It's like saying a dressage horse, once ridden down the centre line, will never halt at X again.
So, do you believe riding at a fence and halting instead of jumping teaches the horse to be a stopper and why?
I've either had instructors start the exercise, praise me for halting when the horse runs through the hand or not say anything at all, so I'm guessing they didn't have problems with the exercise either.
For me the theory is very simple. Go and stop. It's the first thing the horse learns undersaddle and I don't see why some coloured poles changes anything. It's like saying a dressage horse, once ridden down the centre line, will never halt at X again.
So, do you believe riding at a fence and halting instead of jumping teaches the horse to be a stopper and why?