nat_a_528
Active Member
Hi bit of advice needed, trying to restart my tb and in the process of starting to lunge but he keeps coming into me and wont walk around ? I am using a lunge cavesson not a bridle. any ideas????
We had this problem, and it wasn't fun. As we have an enclosed school, I just took the lunge line off, and we have loose schooled from then on. I'm pretty c*** sorting lunge lines tbh, so this way is much safer for us.
One thing I have done is used body language.This may work in getting the horse to turn out from you too - if you stand really big and upright, and really stare into the horse's eye/s, and really stand you're ground, he may well get the message and back off out of your space.
The other, less eloquent way to do it is (taught to me by a friend) - make sure you have a coupling on a bridle, use your voice LOUDLY to give commands, and constantly keep the whip cracking at the shoulder, NOT behind it, or he will just turn in. If he does turn in, get even more vocal and cracking the whip right at his shoulder, without any let up, say out loud "Right, you pick which way you're going, but you ARE going back on the circle". Then let him decide which way he's going to go, and just go with it. Eventually, you will regain control, as he ain't going to win.
Do make sure you wear a hat and gloves ! Will you let me know by pm if this helps, or if you need any more advice ?
Hi - a lot of western horses are worked in round pens, which are really common in the US, and most of the good western training facilities in the UK will have one, so you tend to find that round penning is generally used more than lunging.
That said, lunging is very useful when training the western horse, and the basics are more or less the same.
There is one big difference though. Because the western horse is asked to take a lot of responsibility when being ridden (for example, we ask for the gait and speed then the horse continues until cued otherwise) and we don't micro manage, we need to set that up on the lunge also. So if we ask our horse to lope on the lunge, for instance, once he is loping we don't continually talk to him, and give him layers of instruction, something I have noticed that a lot of English riders tend to do. The idea is that you cue the command, the horse does what he is asked, and you don't have to keep asking while he is doing what you have asked him to do. If you can instil this in the young horse, that will carry over when he is being ridden.
The other thing you need to be aware of is to try to replicate the voice commands that will be used when he is under saddle. Generally most people use 'walk on', with a cluck sound for trot/jog and a kiss sound for canter/lope. To stop is 'whoa', and you should aim to have him stop from a lope in a stride, pick up the lope from walk, and generally do everything you'd expect him to do under saddle.
If you lunge from a rope halter you can turn him on the move (we rarely use cavessons etc) toward you (in a round pen we usually would want the horse to turn in when changing direction, rather than outwards, as it's more respectful to have their head toward you, rather than their back end!)