stangs
Well-Known Member
Given that there’s several of us on here who use positive reinforcement and clicker training with our horses, I thought it might be nice to have a thread where we can discuss what we’re up to and what we've learnt.
I’m not doing much with my boy at the minute, being loath to use too much food with him while he’s fat, so we’ve just been doing short target training sessions. I’m very happy with how that’s going. We recently had an understandable issue with him losing interest when working at liberty with hay out in the field. However, I restructured our warm-ups (we start off with quick dynamic stretches to get a high reinforcement rate going, then introduce some seeking behaviours to a static target, because he enjoys it, and then do a little high reinforcement rate work again) and this routine seems to doing a good job of getting him in the right headspace for “higher-energy” work (i.e. trot... He is a very energy-saving boy. He will trot if cued to, but I'm trying get him to offer it without me asking him to).
My other major point of pride is that he’s very ‘sticky’ with the target at the moment - keeping his nose exactly at the target’s level - to the point where we’ve started playing with reinbacks with variable head position (so alternating between high head position, and long and low position, within one reinback). It’s probably not a biomechanically good idea for a horse being ridden, but he's unridden; the more movement variation the better surely; and it’s been very exciting to play with, given how long it took him to start reining back, let alone reining back with his head long and low.
The next thing I want to teach him is the Spanish walk, but I’m still trying to figure out how I want to shape the behaviour. I want to keep his current target a nose target, so do I introduce another target to make solely a knee target, à la dolphin trainer, or do I follow in Ben Atkinson’s footsteps and teach him to kick a shield? If anyone’s trained a Spanish walk solely with R+, I’d be interested to hear your thoughts.
Otherwise I keep meaning to get him started on scentwork again but I’m currently experiencing major paralysis by over analysis in terms of what scent to use and how best to store, etc, so that probably won’t happen for a while yet.
What are other people up to? (Please join this thread. I am so desperate for nerdy clicker talk about horses.)
I’m not doing much with my boy at the minute, being loath to use too much food with him while he’s fat, so we’ve just been doing short target training sessions. I’m very happy with how that’s going. We recently had an understandable issue with him losing interest when working at liberty with hay out in the field. However, I restructured our warm-ups (we start off with quick dynamic stretches to get a high reinforcement rate going, then introduce some seeking behaviours to a static target, because he enjoys it, and then do a little high reinforcement rate work again) and this routine seems to doing a good job of getting him in the right headspace for “higher-energy” work (i.e. trot... He is a very energy-saving boy. He will trot if cued to, but I'm trying get him to offer it without me asking him to).
My other major point of pride is that he’s very ‘sticky’ with the target at the moment - keeping his nose exactly at the target’s level - to the point where we’ve started playing with reinbacks with variable head position (so alternating between high head position, and long and low position, within one reinback). It’s probably not a biomechanically good idea for a horse being ridden, but he's unridden; the more movement variation the better surely; and it’s been very exciting to play with, given how long it took him to start reining back, let alone reining back with his head long and low.
The next thing I want to teach him is the Spanish walk, but I’m still trying to figure out how I want to shape the behaviour. I want to keep his current target a nose target, so do I introduce another target to make solely a knee target, à la dolphin trainer, or do I follow in Ben Atkinson’s footsteps and teach him to kick a shield? If anyone’s trained a Spanish walk solely with R+, I’d be interested to hear your thoughts.
Otherwise I keep meaning to get him started on scentwork again but I’m currently experiencing major paralysis by over analysis in terms of what scent to use and how best to store, etc, so that probably won’t happen for a while yet.
What are other people up to? (Please join this thread. I am so desperate for nerdy clicker talk about horses.)