by Sharon Foley
Danke,
a tall and beautiful sensitive chestnut mare, came to me for training
with quite a bit of emotional baggage as a result of some unsettling
prior experiences in her life. One positive was, though, she arrived
quite clicker-savvy because her owner used clicker training to teach
her some tricks during several months of recuperation for an injury.
Danke
had to be one of the most sensitive horses I'd ever met. She had a
strong sense of self-preservation. You could not pressure her do
anything. Either she bought in or it was 'no deal.' If she was feeling
vulnerable and other horses were nearby she might just stop and start
kicking the unsuspecting victim. I had to be very careful who was
riding nearby.
Clicker
training was instrumental to her recovery. There were quite a few holes
in Danke's training, so quite a bit of time was spent doing groundwork,
longeing, and noodling under saddle in order to get all the little bits
and pieces that worried her straightened out. But straighten out they
did and now she is such a lovely horse to ride.
One
of the most interesting parts of her story had to do with how I
resolved a serious problem she had with cantering, especially to the
left. Whenever Danke was asked for canter to the left, she immediately
threw her whole body, stiff as a board, to the left. No matter how well
things appeared to be going prior to asking for the canter left, as
soon as she THOUGHT that we were going to canter she did the same
thing.
While
ground-training, I had discovered that she was quite responsive to a
“kiss” signal to canter. I decided that to resolve the problem under
saddle I would do “nothing” to ask for canter in any “normal” way (with
legs and seat); instead, I would sit upright with a very relaxed seat
and just “kiss” for the canter. Before it could go bad, I would click
the instant she thought about cantering. I could feel her start to take
the first step with the outside hind. Of course she stopped mid-stride
when I clicked. I fed the treat and then set her up to canter again in
the same was as before. Again I'd kiss and again I'd click the instant
she thought about cantering. I repeated the procedure, only the next
time I let her take a whole stride before I clicked. Again and again,
I'd click, stop, and treat for “thinking of cantering,” “a step of
canter,” “two steps of canter,” “a quarter of a circle of canter,”
“half a circle of canter,” and finally “a whole circle of canter.” I
continued in this manner day after day.
Of
course, every day I was also clicking her for accepting my leg for
forward movement, clicking for slow down, clicking for accepting
turning aids. Little by little, when it came time to canter, I would
begin to notice that she would accept my leg aid to request that she
continue to canter, and I'd click that. Then I started to integrate
some downward transitions, and I'd click those. Then upward transitions
back to canter using my leg and seat in a normal manner. Of course, I'd
click those, too.
I
continued like this for no less than three months. Yes to the casual
onlookerit appeared that I wasn't 'doing' anything. That spent most of
the time stopping to feed treats. I was often asked, can't you just
canter that horse yet? I'd just smile and say, nope not yet. Every day,
if she said she couldn't do it, I would return to clicking for one
stride. But bit by bit, it got better and better, until one day the
problem was simply gone. Today she has a beautiful canter and is happy
to pick it up when asked from trot or walk. This is just one example of
rewarding the behavior you want and taking the time it takes. And
having more than just a “little” faith in the process!