In the animal kingdom there is a pecking order. Richard Shrake points out that its a lot like the military. He ranks in the pecking order go from General down to Private. The General will get first pick of the food, decide where to go and when, and so on.
The second in command will act just like the General but he wont pick on the General because the General dominates him. This string of command continues all the way down to the bottom of the pecking order. Any measure
a new animal comes into the group then the pecking order shifts. Knowing this data
, you can make use of
it to your advantage. You may make yourself the leader in the horses eyes. Hell look to you for command
. Hell obey you.
If you have a dominant horse it will be instinct for him to let a more dominant being contruct
the decisions. In this case the dominant being will be you. You will become leader by using your body language to show you are confident. Being dominant doesnt mean youre being aggressive.
On the other hand, if your horse is the General, you can have to be more assertive. Make sure your horse doesnt think youre a threat. Its elegant to come across as threatening when youre being assertive. If your horse feels threatened hell fight back and you can not
win. And if you are doing horse training, you will find it hard to get results.
In the wild, dominant and aggressive horses will build their bodies tight and contruct
sudden moves with fury while taking into the other horses space. The weaker horse will concede and move out of his space. Think of it as the General screaming an order and the Private is obeying.
Slow movements tend to draw one horse to another. Horses express calmness with relaxed, slow steps. This is how they welcome other horses in their space.
If a horse is trying to show you hes the General you may see a clamped-down tail with pinned ears. To get him to accept you as the General you will move him out of his space. You do this by matching any quick moves he makes with your own quick moves. The trick is to build the first strike before he does.
One way to do this is with a quick arm movement towards him almost like youre violently shooing away some pesky flies. Also, you might
use an aggressive tone of voice towards a horse if hes being aggressive.
How might
you tell if hes conceding to you? If he turns his head or drops it, relaxes his tail, begins chewing, or takes a deep breath, then thats how you know. If any of these happen hes proverb
, Okay, Ill do what you say because I want to listen to you. Pay attention to these clues that tell you your horse is in the Private mode (the follower) instead of the General mode.
When you go into the round pen to work with your horse first check to see how he responds to you. If he rubs his head on you or swings his rear end toward you then hes challenging your position in the pecking order. If youre with a horse thats not dominant you want to make sure he has confidence. Thus, be very careful not to be threatening.
Andy Curry is a nationally known horse trainer and author of several best selling horse training and horse care books. For data
visit his web site at www.horsetrainingandtips.com. He is also the leading expert on Jesse Beerys horse training methods which could be
seen at www.horsetrainingandtips.com/Jesse_Beerya.htm.