
Learning from Horses: Plute
by Ron Meredith
Anyone who's honest with themselves and has been in the horse
business for very long can look back and count quite a few mistakes.
It's the old "if I knew then what I know now" thing. Honest
mistakes are OK. Everybody makes them, so don't beat yourself up too
much about the things you do wrong. The important thing is to learn from
your mistakes.
Plute was a very smart horse. He was a short, muscular mahogany bay
with a dished face, chipmunk cheeks, tiny ears and a big, wise eye. He'd
been trained by Dale Wilkinson and had gone on to become a winning
cutting horse. Then his owner sort of semi-retired Plute and turned him
over to his kids to ride.
One day after a clinic I did for the Erie Hunt and Saddle Club,
Plute's owner approached me and commented that he liked my way with
horses. He told me he had a good cutting horse that had gotten spoiled
by his kids so he wouldn't canter anymore. The horse was a Poco Bueno
son, he said, whose sister was winning lots so he wanted me to get the
horse loping good for a sale that was coming up. What he didn't tell me
was the reason the kids weren't cantering him anymore was that Plute
wanted to buck into the canter. If you didn't let him buck, he wouldn't
canter.
I told Plute's owner I didn't know anything about cutting horses but
he said that was no problem. He'd arrange for me to take Plute to Dale's
so I could learn all about cutting horses. So I hauled Plute to Dale's
place feeling pretty good about myself. Plute's owner said I was good, I
was holding an Arabian judge's card and I figured I had a bigger
business than Dale's. In my mind at the time, all that made me a big
dog.
Dale, on the other hand, saw a kid who needed a lesson and figured
Plute was the one to give it to him. He sent me into a herd of cattle on
the horse and when I asked Plute to canter, all I can say is that I
survived. Ole Plute sent me up in the air and when I came back down, I
was behind the saddle. He bucked again and I wound up in front. Somehow
I managed to stay on board but it wasn't a pretty ride.
While I was there, Dale asked me what my program was. It took me
awhile to figure out what he meant. At that point in my career I was
pretty much doing things as they came up. I hadn't defined a series of
training steps that would get me to a particular goal.
If I had a program at all at that point , I guess you could've called
it "spang" training. That means you surprise the horse and the
horse reacts and spangs back or sidewise or wherever. Then you know the
horse is paying attention to you. And I thought if you knew how to
punish a horse when it didn't behave the way you wanted, you were a good
trainer.
Now if Plute had been a horse that was flighty, or tried to fight me,
or sulked, or tried to get even or had any other kind of dramatic
reaction, I probably wouldn't have learned as much from him as I did.
Plute refused to spang. He'd just quit, put his head up in the air, roll
that big eye and wait til I was done fussing. Gradually he taught me
that a whole lot of fuss doesn't really mean much unless you know how to
shape it. And then he taught me that a whole lot of fuss wasn't really
very respectful of the horse. And it finally dawned on me that
respectful got you a whole lot farther than spang.
I came to respect Plute as I might respect an older man as a mentor.
I guess you could say we did some male bonding and became real buddies.
He got me started on the program we now call heeding here at Meredith
Manor. Heeding is about constantly reading the horse's emotions and
controlling or responding to those emotions in a way that changes and
shapes what the horse feels. Respect and compassion for horses is
necessary to train them but it's not enough to train them. Heeding can
take you from compassion to connection. Then you have to use that
connection to create shapes that the horse can feel. Create the feel in
the horse of any number of shapes you want him to take and now you have
a trained horse.
We can all look back with regret at things we did when we first
started working with horses. But if the horses can forgive us, we should
be able to forgive ourselves, too, and move on. Just pay attention to
what works, learn from your mistakes, count your horses as teachers and
keep improving your program.
© 1997-2002 Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre.
All rights reserved.
Instructor and trainer
Ron Meredith has refined his "horse logical"
methods for communicating with equines for over 30 years as
president of
Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre,
an ACCET accredited equestrian educational institution.
Rt. 1 Box 66
Waverly, WV 26184
(800)679-2603
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