A3O-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 5,2001 Ground Training For The Horse And Rider DR. NANCY DIEHL Penn State Assistant Professor of Equine Science and BRIAN EGAN Extension Assistant, Horse Program UNIVERSITY PARK (Centre Co.) Working a horse on the ground is an important training aid for both the horse and the rider. This crosses all disciplines and expectations for athletic per formance. It is an exercise with value of its own, not just a hurdle to cross on the way to making the horse ready to ride. The ex perienced rider should use ground training as an opportuni ty to fine tune communication with the horse, and inexperi enced riders in particular should use ground training as an oppor tunity to improve their comfort level with their horse and learn basic training cues. Ground training really begins with handling the foal. It is not critical that the foal be handled in the first hour or even first days of life. However, the sooner the foal is handled touched, hal tered, led, etc. the more oppor tunities he will have to learn be fore going on to more advanced training. Horses learn very well by repetition and this is often easier to accomplish when han dling is started at a young age. When the handler begins working with a weanling, year ling, or 2-year-old, he or she will begin to appreciate and use the horse’s natural “flight zone” as I W *. - ! I ,) < : * Lj[ S* ■’ : vf the basics for much of the later work. In a broad sense, the flight zone can be determined by the distance a horse will allow a per son to approach before turning or backing away and leaving. The more a horse is handled, the smaller the flight zone becomes. The biggest mistake a handler can make is to allow the flight zone to become too small. Most horsemen know a “spoil ed” horse that always wants to nose, nip, or otherwise pester when being handled; this is an noying at best and even danger ous at worst. It is clearly advan tageous to preserve the natural respect a horse has for people, call it the person’s dominance over the horse, if you will. Round pen training is a won derful way to leam to handle and train the young horse. The round pen is not new. It has been in use for years and years, though more recently it has been widely mar keted by popular trainers. The round pen simply provides a safe, enclosed area where you can work a horse without a lead. In round pen training, the handler can use his or her body to control the horse’s speed and direction of movement, by influ encing the horse’s flight zone. For example, when the horse is circling at the perimeter of the round pen, the handler can step ahead of the horse’s trajectory, entering his flight zone, which causes the horse to change direc tion. By making smaller move ments just in front of or in line with the horse’s shoulder, the Thanks Nel-Ra on the installation of their new milking facility Double 12 DeLaval/Blue Diamond G.E.G.L Parallel Parlor, featuring: • Blue Diamond crowd gate • Hygenius washing system handier will be encouraging the horse to move at a slower or fast er speed, respectively. Later, when the horse is worked in hand, on a lead, similar position al changes by the handler will re sult in appropriate responses by the horse. Along with controlling the horse with respect to its flight zone, the handler will use basic cues and training procedures which are simple, classical be havior modification techniques such as reward, positive rein forcement, negative reinforce ment, and occasionally punish ment. Positive reinforcement and reward are very similar in that the horse gets something it likes, such as a grain reward, for a cor rect response. Negative reinforce ment is different than the image it creates in fact, it simply means removing an aversive, an noying, or unpleasant stimulus when the horse does what he is expected to do. At Penn State, we refer to this as “pressure and release.” “Pressure” can be in the form of a physical stimulus, such as a pull on a lead rope, or a spa tial stimulus, such as infringing on the horse’s flight zone. When the horse responds cor rectly, such as by stepping for ward to the pull or pressure on the lead, the handler immediate ly relaxes and this is the “re lease” (or the negative reinforce ment). Using the spatial pressure example, when the handler moves forward towards the horse, into its flight zone, the horse should back up. As soon as & Congratulations to Farms. Mverstown, PA 4 % " •/ DeLaval H Universal Casons —s Since 1931 I I • Parlor Advisor detachers • Lobe 10 hp. vacuum pump w/variable speed drive the horse takes a step back, the handler stops moving forward, as the “release.” Horses will develop what we call a “conditioned response” to various forms of pressure stimuli. That is, the horse learns to re spond quicker to subtler forms of pressure. When working a horse on the ground, eventually the handler will just need to move the hand that is holding the lead (and not apply any pull or pres sure at all) and the horse will go in the desired direction. Another very common example of a con ditioned response is the horse that learns the sequence of pick ing up his feet during grooming and seemingly complies so Well by picking up the next foot be fore you get to it. When a horse walks, stops, turns, and even per forms intricate dressage move ments under saddle with no ap parent cues by the handler, it appears magical, but really it’s the beautiful crystallization of positive and negative reinforce ment and conditioned responses. For those with a primary focus on breeding horses, ground train ing is particularly critical with stallions. Much of the time when we are faced with a stallion that is unruly or unmanageable in the breeding shed, we find that one of the core problems is poor ground manners. Our first approach to retrain ing an unruly stallion is estab lishing impeccable responses to cues from the handler to stop, back, and walk forward at a con trolled pace, outside of the breed ing context. Once again, we would use the horse’s natural flight zone and positive and neg ative reinforcement principles. Once back in the breeding shed, the ultimate positive reinforce ment is permitting the stallion to make progress toward the mare or breeding dummy. This retain ing process also requires a han dler who can differentiate be tween appropriate excitable and inappropriate unmanageable be havior for a stallion in the breed ing shed. Conditioned responses can also work in our favor when we have a stallion with a dual ca reer, e.g. breeding and showing. Stallions often learn which halter and lead are used for going to the breeding shed and which are used prior to tacking up for a ride, and will behave according ly- At Penn State, we value teach ing these basic training and learning principles. We have a unified teaching program in equine science that includes courses in basic and advanced production and management, se lection and judging, equine be havior, equine facilitated thera py, and handling and training. In each class, students are learning some of the important elements behind the horse’s natural behav ior and how we can influence that behavior appropriately, through training and also through good husbandry. The handling and training class dedi cates nearly the whole semester to critical ground training tech niques, which are so clearly of benefit to both the horse and the student of all skill levels. DAIRY EQUIP. DIVISION Blue Ball, PA 17506 East Of New Holland On Rt. 23 CALL (717) 354-8030