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Western Riding

Western Training: Developing a Soft Feel in Your Horse

A soft feel can be taught from the ground using a bridle or a halter. Ask for your horse to give to your rein pressure and then release when he responds. Photo by Abigail Boatwright

A “soft feel” can mean many things to a horse person. From the rider’s ability to communicate with the horse through rein and body cues, to the horse responding to those cues, this term encompasses the dialogue between both parties.



For AQHA Professional Horseman Allen Walton, a soft feel is when your horse easily responds to your direction. But this doesn’t happen automatically—a horse’s natural inclination is to resist pressure. To encourage the optimum communication between you and your horse, Walton has a few exercises he recommends.

Photo by Abigail Boatwright

Meet the Expert



Allen Walton is an American Quarter Horse Association (AQHA) Professional Horseman who lives in Bluff Dale, Texas, with his wife, Bobbie. Walton focuses on training and riding in cutting, reining, reined cow horse, roping and ranch
and stock horse classes. He’s competed at events such as the National Cutting Horse Association Futurity, the American Quarter Horse Association World Championship Show, and the National Reined Cow Horse Association (NRCHA) World’s Greatest Horseman competition. Walton hold judge’ s cards for AQHA, NRCHA, and American Paint Horse Association. He’s judged the AQHA World Show several times, as well as the AQHA Versatility Ranch Horse World Show.

What Does It Mean?

To Walton, a soft feel is a give and take between horse and rider.

“When you pick up the reins and ask for some collection and the horse resists, he’s pushing on you,” Walton says. “A soft feel means no resistance.”

Asking your horse to give to your pressure and then releasing when he responds is the foundation of a soft feel. Photo by Abigail Boatwright

Walton says the communication between you and your horse is one on one. You have to be sensitive to the horse and your horse has to be sensitive to you, which creates a balance. Your reins are the communication you have with your horse—they’re the method in which you direct his movement.

“It doesn’t just mean picking up the reins,” Walton says. “When you’re doing groundwork with your horse, when you’re leading him—anything to do with the horse—you can ask for a soft feel.”

This communication is not limited to your hands. Your legs and body play a part. You will use your legs to drive your horse toward the bridle. Any time you pick up the reins to ask for a soft feel and your horse resists, you’ll use your legs to ask him to go into the bridle.

You may need to drive your horse with your legs into the bridle to encourage this communication. Photo by Abigail Boatwright

A soft feel also means your horse turns his head toward you when you apply pressure to the lead rope, or he picks up his foot when you slide your hand down the back of his leg so you can clean it, or he moves aside when you ask him to give you space in a stall.

When your horse braces his body against your cues, he’s not going to be able to give and take when you ride him, and he’s not going to be able to do the maneuvers you’re asking of him.

Teaching Your Horse

You have to be consistent in the way you work with your horse, says Walton. There are many times during your interaction with your horse where you can practice developing a soft feel.

Your horse can learn to respond to your body language pressure to move forward and away from you and pressure on the lead to turn toward you. Photo by Abigail Boatwright

When you ask for your horse to give to your hand in the saddle or on the ground, for example, you must give him a release when he does so.

“There has to be a reward for responding to you,” Walton says. “If he’s bracing against you and you show him that you’ll brace back until he gives and becomes soft, that softness becomes his release. Your release of pressure becomes his reward.”

ON THE GROUND: With your horse outfi tted in either a halter and leadrope or a bridle and reins, you can stand beside your horse and ask him to give his face toward you with your hands on one rein or leadrope. Once he responds toward you, release your pressure, and repeat.

Make sure to do these exercises on both sides. You can ask your horse to soften and lower his head, or to soften and give to the side.

You can step to the end of your reins or lead and ask your horse to give from further away, and you can ask your horse to back away from you. Keep your responses consistent as you build an understanding with your horse.

IN THE SADDLE: Ask for your horse to soften at the poll and jaw by cueing with your reins as you walk in a circle. When he responds by softening his pressure against the reins and giving with his face, release your pressure, then repeat on the other side. You can ask him to give with his face, shoulder, ribs or hip fol-lowing the same pressure-and-release system.

What to Avoid

Picking up a leg is another example of a soft feel; your horse should respond to your cue of pressure on his leg by picking it up for you. Photo by Abigail Boatwright

Inconsistent cues will make your cues have no meaning. If you’re cueing with your reins and he softens his mouth toward you, then you release your rein pressure. This also applies with leg pressure.

“Any time you put pressure on the horse with your reins or your legs and he responds and sof-tens to you, then you give him a release of some sort,” Walton says. “But if you’re not consistent with your cues, your horse will become confused.”

Working with your horse on these concepts every time you interact with him will increase your communication and build a foundation for more complicated training.

This article about developing a soft feel in your western horse appeared in the April 2020 issue of Horse Illustrated magazine. Click here to subscribe!

Abigail Boatwright

Abigail Boatwright is a freelance writer and photographer based in Texas, and is the editor of Horse Illustrated’s sister publication, Western Life Today.

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