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Owned by Tricia

Enroll now to learn how to speak your horse's language so you may teach them yours and begin seeing more progress towards your training goals.

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7 contributions to Better Together Horsemanship
Collection
What’s the difference between collection and engagement? Knowing the difference means you’ll pay the correct try when asking for each of them. Each will give you a wonderful result but they are a little different….
Collection
0 likes • 2d
I figure proper collection begins with proper engagement - the horse rounds it's back and engages the hind end to reach under and locomote ahead. From there, you can choose to gather the horse into the bridle and use body weight to slow/shorten the horses strides. You also need proper engagement when extending gaits - a good way to know whether or not the horse is engaged properly is to compare the angle of the forward moving leg front and back - they should be equal.
Colt Starting Skool please join
Can I promote my Skool here? I'm trying to grow it but don't want to invest the $9/month until I have a decent sized membership roster. https://www.skool.com/colt-starting-guru-3188/about?ref=d3d4f9903c10432c996e73dfb28feb85
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Liberty = Truth
The thing I really love about liberty training is the honesty. Your feedback from the horse will change daily, dependant on so many variables - the main one of course being environment. When we take a horse into a new (most times scary) environment you’ll get pure, truthful feedback about your relationship. When a horse is under pressure (and a strange place is the greatest of all pressures) they will either look to you for guidance or they’ll look for help somewhere else. This is the main reason I never train in round yards. Round yards create a false sense of security for us, and horse create a natural sense of safety with the wall of the arena -away from you!! When you start at liberty it’s much easier for us to use a small yard. But in fact this is the biggest downfall in liberty. If you lose your horse to the outside wall you have created a huge problem - a release of pressure AWAW from you. Any time that horse feels pressure it will just leave. And we see this a lot in competition - when the horse leaves to find safety because the pressure is too great. This weeks focus will be how to keep your horse feeling safe with you without the need for a round yard. The ultimate in building trust. #bettertogetherhorsemanship
Liberty = Truth
1 like • 23d
@Eliza Lane it sounds like we are on two separate topics... when I work my horse in the round pen, I AM the pressure but when they're loose in their paddocks for example, they come to me and stay with me if there is an outside pressure situation or scary thing. I am not the pressure when they are free but I am when we work. Another example would be when I was walking my stallion at a new showground a mare got loose and was making a beeline for him. He wasn't *working working* but I was leading him so he has to behave but I wasn't putting any pressure on him... He was excited by the mare but still walked with me and loaded in the trailer as quickly as possible. That was a scary/new/exciting pressure situation but he looked to me for direction and since I was calm, so was he. Had I been harried or rushing and my heart rate was up then he would have reacted in kind. I'm in the US so we may say things differently... To me, liberty is the ability to control my horse without a tether walk, trot, canter, halt around me along with a few tricks, like bowing. I exert pressure from a distance and they respond to my body language and position. I think you're talking about liberty when not working? Anyhow here are a couple pics of my young stallion, practicing bowing at Liberty (loose in paddock) and trotting poles at Liberty while at work - I was guiding him around a pole & cavaletti course from a distance. He wears a bridle minimum when we are working - that's his cue that it's time to listen.
1 like • 23d
@Eliza Lane thank you! Still a work in progress but I'm very pleased with all my horses progress so far! I learned that talking about horses online to people all over the country and world can be dangerous because people use different terminology for the same things and the same terminology for completely different things! You had me scratching my head - but now I get it! Thanks for entertaining my exhausted confusion.. getting ready for winter never ends!
Barrels ain’t barrels
Working equitation barrels pattern is all about perfect circles and nothing about speed. Holding equ distance around the barrels, crossing your lines (meeting the other circle) and correct flexion - this pattern is way harder than it looks. This helps horse learn to bend around the centre and keep their bodies aligned.
Barrels ain’t barrels
0 likes • 23d
How do you recommend we ask our horses to bend? And how can we tell if they are bending properly from up top?
Ground tying
Can you please do a video/lesson on how to start training the ground tie?
1 like • 23d
I started teaching my stallion how to ground tie by first teaching "stand" on a line, walking him at first and then on a lunge line. Once he understood that "stand" meant to stay put even if I am walking away or doing cartwheels it was fairly easy to begin ground tying. I let the lead rope go and walked away, just a short distance at first because you want to set them up for success by making the task easy at first - then praised him. I also walked from side to side, building up slowly until I could walk all the way around him. Praise each time and slowly make the ground tying lesson last longer and get further and further away. Voilá - a horse that ground ties. It starts with a good "Stand"
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Tricia Dew
2
12points to level up
@tricia-dew-8616
I use a variety of techniques and methods to train horses. It's important to speak their language so you can teach them yours. Join my group to learn

Active 2d ago
Joined Nov 19, 2025
Kingston NH 03848
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