Loose Riders

Loose Riders is a monthly horse newsletter published by Michael Sande and edited by Karie LaNou of rural Cadott, Wisconsin.

Winter 2008

clock December 5, 2008 01:26 by author Michael Sande

Winter is just around the corner and lots of things to get done before the snow flies. 

We set the poles for the syrup cook shack today.  It has been out in the open long enough!  Its only four months until syrup season and I know that will be here in a snap! 

I will start Banjo next week.  I'm hoping he will be in the harness before Thanksgiving.  That leaves me three months of driving before maple syrup season.

I received my Rural Heritage magazine today.  They advertised for drving school; I wonder what that would be like?!

We have one more mare to foal!  I predicted by Sunday the 26th but now I don't know.  The foals are coming along real nice.  Karie has been out to work with them everyday - That makes a big difference as they grow.  They all need to be started on a worming program, so I guess we need to get at that!

I have gone back to riding.  It sure brings on a few new muscle aches.  It sure is nice to be back up on horseback again though.  Hope to see you on the trail so,

Stay Straight in the Saddle

Mike



Weaning Foals

clock October 5, 2008 01:25 by author Michael Sande

We are about ready to wean our foals!!  Yes, it will be a nervous time for us all.  We have four to separate but with the new barn and paddocks, we should be in good shape.  Doing it now will give those mares time to put on a few extra pounds for winter.

I have lots of plans for the winter.  I have a gelding that I intend to work in the harness. He has been handled some but most of his life has been on open pasture.... should be interesting!  My pulling mares are both bred and by spring will be heavy with foal.  So, I need replacements!  I also need wood so I will be out there all winter long.  My health is coming along real nice, so that means by midwinter, I should be back in the swing of things.

I talked with a lady the other day and she was telling me that her and her friends plan a ride each week, all Fall long.  Boy, that sure sounded nice.  Not to let it happen by chance, but to make out a plan and then do it. I'm a great one to let all the other stuff get in the way.  Like hauling hay or building this last stretch of fence, etc, etc

So let's do it!  Plan a ride!

Stay Straight in the Saddle

Mike



Horses & Back Surgery

clock September 5, 2008 01:24 by author Michael Sande

Fall riding is just around the corner.  Our cool nights seem to re-energize our systems as well as our horses!  It has been one of the nicest summers we have had for a few years.

It seems like I can't get out from under the doctor's care.  I ended up with back surgery in August.  I was pretty much well on my way from surgery in '07 and then this thing with my back.  Well anyway, I'm working my way through recovery.  No lifting any more than 20lbs.  I'm a little afraid to say anything about horse back riding just yet.  I have read that just brushing your horse is good therapy -- I can say, it really works!  I have brushed and walked my horse these last few weeks and it really does give me a calming feeling.  I'm on the mend, so 'till then, stay straight in the saddle! - Mike



Spring 2008

clock March 5, 2008 01:23 by author Michael Sande

Have you been reading any monthly horse mags lately?  Wow, they cover everything from flies to slaughter houses!  I think I have three different issues each month and to tell the truth, it's too much!  I'm looking for more practical articles I guess.  I'm not in the show ring and I'm slow to go out on the trail.  I'm somewhere in-between.

I had some medical problems late last fall and I'm slow to recover.  I have been driving my horses but I have yet to do any riding.  I hope to give it a try next week.  In my whole life, riding has been the best therapy I could get! So, I'm looking forward to being "Back in the Saddle"!

We experienced a fantastic maple syrup season!  We cooked down for 10 gallons of syrup and we sold 1,200 gallons of sap!

We also have three Kentucky Mountain Saddle Horse filly foals on the ground and they are just gaiting like crazy with color to catch anyone's eye!  We will be posting pictures and we will be looking for buyers!!

So, till then, Stay Straight in the Saddle! 

Mike



Is it my Fault--Or my Horse's

clock January 7, 2008 09:00 by author Michael Sande

WAVERLY, WV--Every rider has experienced the situation where they ask their horse for a particular shape or movement and either nothing happens or something other than what they wanted happens. You apply the aids for a left lead canter and the horse just keeps walking along as though nothing changed at all. Or you apply those aids and the horse wrings its tail and moves off at a brisk trot instead of the intended canter. What went wrong?

Without "being there" and observing the interaction, the only thing we can say for sure is that the communication between you and your horse failed. Why it failed is a more complicated issue that frustrates multitudes of riders daily. You are not alone.

Communication can fail because of rider error. It can fail because the horse is not sufficiently far along in its training to understand the shape that the rider's aids suggest. It can fail because the horse is physically unable to take the shape because of conformation faults, old injuries, lingering soreness from yesterday's workout, or equipment that restricts or interferes with the shape. It can fail because the horse is mentally burned out. Or the communication can fail because the horse simply has the kind of personality that says that day, "I don't want to," or "You can't make me" or "You didn't ask the right way so I'm going to ignore that.

You need to examine your particular communication failure from all of those different perspectives in order to figure out why things didn't go according to your plan. The first thing to ask yourself is whether the horse is capable of understanding your request. Where is he in his training? Is this something he's just learned or a movement he's been doing for some time?

Next, ask yourself a few questions about the horse's body condition. Is this a new horse that might be happier with a different saddle or bit than the ones you have chosen? Could the horse be a little sore from strenuous work his last time out? Are you asking for a movement that might be difficult for this horse given his current level of physical conditioning or his conformation?

Think about the horse's mental condition. Having you been drilling this or similar movements a great deal recently? Have you just returned from a stressful show or other event? Or has he been confined for several days without any opportunity to play a little before working?

Be honest about your riding skills. Is the movement you asked for something that is relatively new in your riding experience? Is this a movement that other riders can get from this horse easily? Are you completely relaxed, balanced and following the motion of the horse as you apply your aids? Are you applying the correct aids in a coordinated way with the right timing and right degree of pressure?

When you put the answers to all of these questions together, what you need to do next will be much clearer. For example, if the horse is green, he may just need more quiet repetitions of exactly the same aids applied in the same rhythm with exactly the same timing and degree of pressure until the light bulb goes off in his head that this particular set of pressures goes away when he takes the right shape. Until that happens, the rider may be doing everything correctly but the results of the communication will be uneven.

This scenario assumes, of course, that the rider has an independent seat and can apply aids in a way that influences the horse. If not, then there's the root of the problem. She needs to keep on practicing, using the horse's response as feedback that helps her learn when she's got it right. Until the rider gets better, there will be many more times ahead when the communication is less than perfect. That's alright. Work with a good instructor who can help you through the rough spots as you develop the independent seat you need for clear communication.

If the horse is an old campaigner who absolutely knows what piaffe means or how to do a perfect rollback, then the rider needs to ask if the horse may be hurting physically or a burned out mentally. If the horse is sore or sour, then they should do something else that day until those problems are resolved. If those aren't issues, then the rider needs to consider the horse's personality. Is this an animal that sometimes has an attitude or that looks for ways to evade its work? Then you may need to repeat your request, reinforcing it by using a greater degree of the pressures you know the horse understands or even enforcing the aids with the spur or crop.

Depending on your own personality, your first reaction to a communication breakdown may be to blame yourself for being inept or stupid. Or you blame the horse for being stubborn or grouchy. Or you blame the instructor for putting you on a second-rate school horse that's not much fun to ride. Assigning blame does not fix a problem. Instead, look at the communications failure as an opportunity. The best way to improve your riding is to learn from your mistakes. Just keep riding



March 2007

clock March 5, 2007 01:23 by author Michael Sande

Maple syrup season in underway!  My daughter and my son took the day away from their schedules and we went to tapping trees. It was a great day, sun was shining, horses were hooked to the sled and there was alot of spice and sass!!  But, with some hill climbing and sloshing thru the snow, they settled pretty quickly.  By afternoon, the pair of horses were willing to walk calmly thru the woods.  It's not all about the horses because there is alot of tree tapping, hauling buckets from tree to tree, drilling for the taps and of course a few snow balls that appear from nowhere....

Rough count was 150 trees tapped!  That means there are about 50 or so to go.  We did all right with doing 150 today.  More help tomorrow so the last 50 should go pretty well.  Then we need to get the pan positioned tomorrow and maybe collect the first time on Thursday.

Full days but lots of laughs and good food and good times.  We haven't collected our first gallon of sap yet and already our season is a success.

So stay straight in the saddle 'till nex time!  Mike



Conditioned Response

clock March 2, 2007 19:12 by author Michael Sande


by Charles Wilhelm

Conditioned response is the fundamental tool of the trainer. A psychological term, it names the result of the process of associating a natural behavior (say, a halt) with an artificial cue (say, pressure on the lead rope). A natural behavior is something that the horse can and will do. For example, it's a rare horse who will free-jump a 6' fence, so we don't start there when we set out to teach jumping; we start with a ground pole. To make it easier on the horse and yourself, start with something you can easily set him up to do. Thus, we start by working with the natural behaviors of moving forward and stopping.

What do we mean by an artificial cue? Well, let's look at a natural cue first. Say a dog goes rustling through the hedge nearby, startling your horse, who shies and moves away. The rustling noise is a natural cue -- no one had to teach your horse to respond in this way. It's just the nature of a horse, as a prey species, to get away from possible danger. However, put a halter on a horse who isn't yet halter-broke, and put pressure on the lead rope, and you are as likely to get a head toss or attempt to break away as forward motion. Thus, the tug on the lead rope is not a natural cue -- it is artificial. We want to create a conditioned response in the horse that when he feels pressure on the halter, he moves in the direction of that pressure.

How do we do it? We associate the artificial cue with the natural cue, and then reward the response. To teach a horse to go forward, we kiss while urging the horse to go forward. Depending on the horse's level of emotional responsiveness, that urging may range from the wave of a hand or hat, to the toss of a lariat towards the horse's rear, or the tap of a whip on his butt. When the horse responds, we reward by stopping the cues, taking the pressure off. Similarly, to teach the halt, we pick up on the lead rope and set the horse up to stop (say, by walking in front of his path--most horses would rather not run you over, and will halt, at least momentarily while changing directions). Again, when we get even a hint of the feet stopping, we let up on the pressure. This is how we say YES! that was right! to our horses.

Because going forward is more natural to a horse than stopping (especially if the horse is emotionally "high", as they will usually be in a strange situation), teaching and refining the halt cue takes a little more work than teaching the go forward cue. Still, it's a rare horse who doesn't have the whole thing down in an hour if the trainer is consistent.

Rewarding is extremely important to this system. The behavior you reward is the behavior you'll get. If you let up on the pressure before the horse has actually stopped his feet, or even slowed down, then that's the behavior you're more likely to get next time. By the same token, if the horse stops his feet and you don't let up on the rope -- he doesn't know he's done what you wanted, and you've missed an opportunity to reward the behavior you want. Set the horse up to win, and you are setting yourself up to have a happy, thinking horse.

To find out more about Charles Wilhelm, read the HQ Journal article A Day in the Life of... For more information about Charles Wilhelm, training or clinic schedules, please visit the C.W.Training Center website www.cwtraining.com You may e-mail Charles Wilhelm at cwtraining@home.com



February 2007

clock February 5, 2007 01:22 by author Michael Sande

This year's plans include MORE RIDING.  I figure, if I keep on telling everyone that I'm going to ride, it will come true for me as well!  I have horses to ride and the chores are going to have to wait.  I say that now and I will be pretty good for a while.  BUT, I'm sure the fencing isn't going to get done by itself and I was thinking about a barn this year as well.  But, I will ride as much as I can.

We have a stud in the mix this year and I already see that he has love on his mind.  I'm not sure that's what it's called, but it sure is something!  The fences are going to be electrified; I'm going to keep at least one mare with him all the time.  He is just three but we are confident that he will do the job.

I read alot this past winter and I have alot of things to try out come warmer weather.  That's just around the corner and I'm looking forward to it.

We joined the Chippewa Valley Trail Riders club this year.  We're looking forward to going on some rides.  It sounds like some real nice people are in this club.  Hope to strike up some new friends, and some new places to ride.  I have been looking over the schedule for some of the big trainers.  They DO make it to WIS but you have to check out the dates.  Seems like I'm working every time there is a clinic!  It's a pretty good idea to try and make at least one each year.

If anyone has some news they would like to pass on just let us know and we will add it to our site.

So, 'till then,

Stay Straight in the Saddle,

Mike



January 2007

clock January 5, 2007 01:22 by author Michael Sande
I’m back in the saddle and feeling great! It’s taking some adjusting of my equipment but with little patience I’m making it happen.

Cold weather riding has its moments but over all it can be pretty nice. We own a real sweet 3 yr old and she hasn’t been ridden. Well it’s up to me to bring her along. I did a lot of the ground training late fall and now its time to get on. Believe me, when the books talk about spending time on the ground training it really works. A lot of the commands are already in place before I even got on.

When I talk about adjusting equipment, I’m talking about length of straps and finding stirrups wide enough to hold my snow pack boots. I also have been looking for a piece of sheepskin for warmth, found that as well.

There sure is a lot of gear out there for staying warm. You just have to look. But with the warm winter were having, just pick the right time of the day and its pretty nice.

Give it a try! But go slow at first; slipping on ice can hurt you and your horse.

So Stay Straight in the Saddle till next time!

MIKE



Win Pulling Contests with Brain, Not Brawn

clock December 31, 2006 03:36 by author Michael Sande

WAVERY, WV--The average horse weighs at least five or six times the average human adult. So it doesn't take a rocket scientist to predict who's going to win if they get into a pulling contest.

  Humans who find themselves in pulling matches with their horses need to learn to use their brains rather than their brawn to solve the problem. Often, they're so busy arguing with the horse that they don't take time to analyze the problem.

  Constant pulling or lugging against the bit is an evasion of a rider's poor hands that quickly becomes a bad habit. It's not obstinacy on the horse's part. It's self-defense. Riders without an independent seat bounce with every stride, hitting the horse's mouth with each bump. Really unsteady riders may hang on the reins to maintain their balance. The horse soon figures out that pulling against this bouncing or hanging stop the pain. A steady, hard pull eventually numbs his mouth so he no longer feels the jerking.

  Once pulling has become a habit, it takes time and patience to retrain the horse to trust the bit. Longe the horse in a simple snaffle bit and side reins that have elastic inserts or rubber donuts for a little give.   With the reins long enough to allow the horse to stretch its neck, work toward a relaxed, rhythmic trot. Then ask for transitions between the trot and walk, and finally for cantering with transitions back and forth to trot. The horse must move forward from driving aids to correct the pulling. If the horse starts to pull while longeing, send him forward with stronger driving aids.

Once the horse moves relaxed on the longe in all three gaits without pulling, put the rider back up without reins. With the horse still in side reins, work the same sequence of longeing transitions until both horse and rider are completely relaxed and the horse is not pulling. While the horse is learning to trust the bit, the rider must work on an independent seat. That means riding with all muscles and joints relaxed while balancing over the horse's center of gravity. No gripping. No hanging on the reins.

Next, remove the side reins and give the rider reins but keep the horse on the longe line. The person on the ground can help with forward driving aids if needed and the safe, familiar longeing circle helps the horse stay relaxed. The rider should have steady hands and give the horse enough rein length to allow it to stretch its neck. The horse must understand that driving aids mean forward and weight aids mean to slow or stop.  When the rider can ride all three gaits and transitions on the longeing circle with the horse remaining relaxed and not pulling, they are ready to leave the longe line and move on.



About the Author and Editor

Michael Sande has been working with, raising, and breeding horses since he was a child.  Having lived in rural Wisconsin most of his adult life, he has strong roots in the horse industry.

Karie is Michael's daughter, and has had a passion for horses since she was a child.  She currently lives in rural Cadott, Wisconsin where she has her own horse ranch (Northern Gaits) for kentucky mountain horses.

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