I Love Clicker Training
I have continued riding Trifecta on short rides in the arena followed by riding him down the hill to the river and back. He has been doing it pretty well, but he still gets so excited when we leave the barn. He isn't worried about things--just excited he is going out and about. He just loves it out in the big world. Someday, he will be the most wonderful trail horse because of his eager attitude. Right now, it makes things tough for me.
The biggest drawback to that is that he tends to go really fast. I love a fast walk. That's not the problem. The problem is that there are two very short and steep slopes on our hill and gravity gets the better of him. He tries to fly down them with his legs completely out of control. Once, he started to trot when he was close to the bottom, and he was difficult to stop.
I have tried using walk/whoa transitions, and that helped a lot to keep him from getting too much momentum, but it was still a struggle. He just couldn't understand that I needed him to slow down.
I have been on this road before. Both Cruiser and Cole had a lot of trouble going down steep hills. (Dante used to live in the mountains and never had a problem.) Where I used to ride Cruiser in his early days, there were several very long, steep hills. I ended up just riding up and down, over and over with him and he learned his lesson.
I did something similar with Cole, but I did it with clicker training and on a lead rope. It took one lesson of up and down, over and over and he learned quite well.
I tried that with Trifecta last fall, and he was just impossible. I was never able to slow him down enough for him to earn a treat, and he just exhausted me. I gave up. He wasn't much better this summer when I was leading him before I began riding him. I just struggled.
He did better once I started to ride him down the hill because I had more control from the saddle, but he never walked slow--just better. That is, until last week. I was riding him down the first slope and he broke into a trot. While I was trying to stop him, he decided cantering was a better idea. That wouldn't have been so bad, except he headed for the cliff. I got him to turn back on the trail, but we got way, way too close. He really scared me.
As scared as I was, I knew just what needed to be done. We had to do it again and again until we got it right. I was willing to spend all afternoon. Eventually, he would get demoralized enough that he would slow down and get a click. Ellen agreed. To be on the safe side, she hooked the lead rope up to him. I rode him back up the slope, turned him around to go down and he immediately walked slow. Of course, I clicked him and gave him his treat. We continued down the slope; clicking and treating the whole way. He walked like a gentleman, and we were able to show him that that is what we wanted. When we got to the bottom, we turned around and did it again. This time, I had him walk a few more steps between clicks.
Did he offer to go slower because he was demoralized? I really don't think so. When we have turned him around to go back down the hill in the past, he would go slower, but not that much slower. I think that he slowed down because the whole event scared him, too. He didn't want to leave Ellen who was walking slowly next to him--and then came all the clicks and treats!
The next test was steep slope #2. This one is longer and goes around a corner. He always had a harder time with it, but since it was at the bottom of the hill, there was no cliff to go over. On my very first request, he stepped down the hill at a slow speed. I did multiple clicks and treats. When we got to the bottom, I rewarded him by riding down the the end of the trail. He did want to go to the river, but I made him pass up the exit ramp.
We turned around and went back to the slope. We then practiced it 2 times, and he was perfect. I increased the steps between clicks again. We were going to practice slope #1 again, but there were a lot of vehicle noises coming from a nearby house that startled him. I decided I would do better by leading him home through it, and I was right. I didn't feel like remounting when I got to the slope, and we just went straight home.
The next day I rode him, I knew what I had to do. We had to go back to the hill and try it again. The weather is getting questionable, and I didn't know if I would have another day in the near future to reinforce his lesson. I must confess, I was a little nervous about it--and Ellen was, too. Still, it needed to be done whether we were nervous or not.
There was no reason to be nervous. Trifecta is a genius. He remembered his lesson and remembered it well. He walked down both slopes like a gentleman. I continued to click and treat him for it--I want him to remember it well. Trifecta is a good boy. If he knows what I want, he usually will try his best to do it. My problem all along was that I couldn't find a way to show him what I wanted from him.
We did just one trip down the hill without re-doing the steep slopes. He was so good that he didn't need to practice them. Now, if it rains for the next 2 weeks, I will feel confident that even if he doesn't remember what we want right away, it won't be that hard to remind him.
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