A: Some horses are what I call “forward-aholics”—they constantly have “Go!” on their brain. This is a very common problem. You need to teach your mare that when you apply pressure to her sides with both legs, it means go forward; if you apply pressure to her side with one leg, it means move laterally.
VIDEO: Watch how Clinton Anderson teaches the sidepass through groundwork >>
To keep your horse’s forward tendencies in check, and eliminate her confusion, teach her to sidepass on the fence, first yielding her hindquarters and then redirecting her energy sideways. The fence will stop your horse from walking forward, and yielding her hindquarters will set her feet in motion so you don’t have to create lateral movement from a standstill; you’ll just redirect her energy sideways.
Steps to Side passing on the Fence
If you’re going counter-clockwise around the arena, you’ll tip your horse’s nose toward the fence with your right rein, and at the same time press with your right leg back near her flank to ask her to disengage her hindquarters.
The secret to sidepassing is finding a starting point and then building off of it. One correct step is plenty for the first couple of lessons. After six or seven lessons, your horse will be able to easily sidepass 10 steps.
Tip for Success
Teach your horse to sidepass from the ground first so she will already understand the concept of the lesson when you attempt it in the saddle, ensuring you’ll run into less resistance.
When your horse can sidepass on the fence well, you can use the same concept to teach her how to sidepass away from the fence. But don’t move off the fence too quickly. You want to make sure your horse understands that when you apply pressure to her ribcage with one leg, you want her to move laterally, not forward.
Liked this article? Here’s more from Clinton Anderson:
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Clinician Clinton Anderson owns and operates Downunder Horsemanship in Stephenville, Texas, where his method of horsemanship has helped to transform the relationship between thousands of horses and riders. He also hosts two training programs (Downunder Horsemanship) that air weekly on Fox Sports Net and RFD-TV. For more information and a schedule of events, visit www.downunderhorsemanship.com
This article originally appeared in the May 2011 issue of Horse Illustrated. Click here to subscribe!
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This article makes it sound so easy. I will have to reread it a few times, and then go out and practice.
a lot of great info!
love all the tips. I had to do the same using the fence.
Great advice. Fences can be so handy!