irishcob
Well-Known Member
Haha. I used to do "click click click" and thought I was making progress with the horse...
Some of my old instructors used to do it too. Now I know if I use my legs properly I don't need to click at all...
![]()
Like!
Haha. I used to do "click click click" and thought I was making progress with the horse...
Some of my old instructors used to do it too. Now I know if I use my legs properly I don't need to click at all...
![]()
Are you more stressed with the instructor's clicking, or with your youngster's inability to cope with it? Your reaction to three clicks seems a bit over the top, which is why I'm saying that. Often in situations where we feel stressed or tense, we focus on little things which are actually only a small party of the bigger picture. Not criticising you - everyone does it, I do it all the time!! Try to take a step back. Yes, your youngster is sensitive to noise, yes she was in a new environment - but three clicks is nothing! What if a door had slammed, or a car backfired etc? Maybe the best thing to do would be to explain all this to your instructor, and work on the noise sensitivity with them in a safe environment, before you bother with more proper schooling type of work? But I would also say, clicking during training should always be appropriate - not just for the sake of it - and a clear instruction to the horse. Years ago when my lad was young, in my first lesson with him, I clicked him for something,can't evening remember what. My instructor (v old school but amazing), asked me why I was clicking, and I couldn't explain, it was just something I did, which really made me think about how horses respond and learn about noise cues.
What is it with all this clicking?! I always think riders sound like demented chickens clucking and clicking away.... it drives me potty! So glad I mostly ride on my own now. What's wrong with riding with seat and leg aids?
I think you are making a mountain out of a molehill. If you are that nervous that a click was that traumatic for you then I'd definitely tell the instructor because they probably haven't got a clue that it's such a problem for you.
But you would not tell someone elses dog off if the owner was there - so why on earth do instructors do this?
What else could I have done ? I explained what she is like, she saw what she is like, she finally saw her settle, and thatw as not enough for her first session?
So why does the instructor not say "needs to be more forward" and allow the rider to learn and implement?
And yes she needs a lot of work - that is why we were having a lesson.
And yes a click set her off, but as I had already posted we had spent most of the session leaping around the school as she was experiancing a different world to her.
I've clicked or given a little lungewhip encouragement to a horse a great many times over the years I was teaching. Its all about getting the result for the rider surely? If I see someone is struggling to get a canter strike off, or has frozen coming up to a jump then a little outside assistance from me solves the problem and boosts the rider's confidence because it didn't all go wrong, nothing disasterous happened and they achieved the movement or whatever, what on earth is wrong with that? I teach children particularly to really bark at their pony if they are trying it on, just like a dog and it gives them confidence that they can overcome the napping, stopping etc without having to use bodily strength which they might not have or can't quite coordinate properly. At first they squeak like little mice so I walk to the other side of the arena and ask them to try again so that I can hear them. But equally I teach them to talk to their pony because it helps to relax the animal, plus you need to breath in order to talk, and that sets up a calming rhythm for both horse and rider. Who has never lunged a horse without clicking to it to keep its attention and forward movement. I think that is partly why instructors do it too. We are effectively doing a lunge lesson without the rein.
I wonder if the OP has more self-confidence issues than issues with the instructor actually.