Mustangs 4 Us
Shoulder & Hindquarter Control

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Newly revised & expanded!

Download this booklet

For more information about the BLM's Wild Horse and Burro Program, please call (866) 4MUSTANGS or Click HERE

This website is owned and created by Nancy Kerson, a private citizen - I am not the givernment

Information about BLM adoptions is offered as a service, to help mustangs find homes and to promote public appreciation of wild horses and burros.

Please direct adoption questions to the BLM, not to me.

And I sure as heck am not a Mustang car dealership!

I have NO horses or burros for sale and not interested in buying or listing your sale animals!

This website:
Copyright 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009
All Rights Reserved.
I am happy to share, but please give me a credit when you "borrow" things off my website! Thanks! Just say, "author, Nancy Kerson www.mustangs4us.com "

VIDEOS OF INTEREST TO MUSTANG & BURRO ADOPTERS:


Kitty Lauman:
From Wild to Willing:
Using the Bamboo Pole to Gentle Mustangs
More from Lauman Training available now!

DVD or VHS
(2-DVD or 2-VHS set) almost 3 hours of instruction!

$39.95 plus $5 shipping/handling = $44.95 total

BUY 2 DVD Set:

Can't Order Online?
No Problem!

Just email us and we'll tell you how to mail order


Lesley Neuman:
The First Touch
Gentling Your Mustang
$45.00

Lesley works with 3 wild horses at a BLM adoption, and very clearly explains what is happening, what she is doing, & what she sees in each horse as it progresses. Study this video and you can learn "pressure and release" gentling techniques to gentle your own new mustang!

Format:


Help for Burro adopters!
Crystal Ward
Donkey Training

All the basics of gentling, handling, and training. A MUST for new burro adopters! Good for domestic donkeys, too!

FORMAT

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Download, Print & Share this Petition for a U.S Postage Stamp to Save Mustangs
 

 

 

 

WorkingWithWildHorses-E4.pdf | How to Raise Orphan Foals | Horse Psychology 101 | Approach & Retreat | Connecting | Just Spend Time | Bamboo Pole | Desensitizing | Clicker Training | Ground Work | Get Professional Help | Gentling Journal l

SHOULDERS AWAY:

Applying energy to the side of the face and the eye on that side encourages the horse to step over its stationary leg and move away from the human.

This is the beginning of the roll-back under saddle, as well as the side-pass, and it is the preliminary step to the shoulder yield.

It is also just a good thing to know when working with horses, especially wild ones, to keep them from coming into your space when you haven't asked for it.

 
 

THE SHOULDER YIELD/FRONTS ACROSS:

This is a trickier movement to teach, but very essential to good ground handling and part of the ground work foundation for saddle training.

With the horse facing you, extend the hand that holds the lead rope - pointing in the direction you wish the horse to move.

Apply energy from the other side, to encourage the horse to move away from that hand.

Release the pressure when the horse steps to the desired side.

HINDQUARTER YIELD, also known as DISENGAGEMENT:

 

 

At liberty: draw the horse's head toward you, with just enough energy to hold his front end still. Apply energy to his hindquarters. The properly executed maneuver will have the horse planting the front foot that is away from you. The hind leg that is toward you will step away from, by stepping under his belly, in front of the "away" leg. (stepping behind the other foot is a backward step and indicates that the horse is not yet flexing and disengaging enough. Try again)

After he can do these actions at liberty, you can add a loose rope. Wild horses are generally extremely soft and responsive to the pressure of a rope - just the slightest tug and they will move in the desired direction.
Clark, an aged wild horse who never did become really comfortable with people, shows us a perfect at-liberty hindquarter disengagement. Note the right foot stepping completely under the belly, in front of the left foot.
The hindquarter yield, also called disengaging the hindquarters, is an important part of saddle training. The horse stores its power for a flight response in its hind muscles. Only when it can relax ("disengage," "yield") its hindquarter muscles under your direction is it safe to ride.

Here Mike does his morning warm-up routine with Ruby, who knows these maneuvers quite well at this point.

Jerry Tindell works with a domestic horse who is still very defensive, not yet able to disengage. Note the head up in the air and the pounding, frantic footwork. The hind foot is not stepping under in front of the other foot, but rather trying to step backward. (He did get this horse to come around real nicely, in not too much time)
Here, Jerry works with a young mule, who is stepping under beautifully. She also exhibits the desireable flexion to her body, forming an arc along the circle she is walking.
  
  
  
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Disclaimer: Horses are inherently dangerous. Use the information contained within this website at your own risk.