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    Home » Tips For Riders

    Tips To Help Calm A Nervous Horse

    Published: Feb 7, 2016 · Modified: Aug 13, 2020 by ihearthorses · This post may contain affiliate links · Leave a Comment

    Like humans, horses can become nervous. When interacting with an anxious horse, being able to calm them down again can help to prevent serious blowups, and being able to calm a nervous horse is an important and valuable skill to have as a rider. Consider using these seven techniques to help calm down a nervous horse.

    Loving young Caucasian woman pets her beautiful stallion grazing in a remote pasture on a tranquil summer evening. Lovely shot of girl sitting and touching her horse pasturing in calm countryside.

    Talk to the Horse

    Your voice can be reassuring to a nervous horse, and speaking has an added benefit – it forces you to breathe and relax, even just a little bit. If you’re in the saddle while your horse gets anxious, then it’s so important that you relax as much as possible. When you do speak to your horse, do so in low, soft, soothing tones.

    Move Slowly

    If you’re on the ground and a horse starts to get nervous, it may be tempting to try to get to the horse as quickly as possible, or to try to grab at the halter to untie the horse. Moving quickly can make these situations much worse, and may cause the horse to overreact. Instead, take a breath and focus on moving at a normal pace.

    Try to relax your arms and shoulders – horses are masters at picking up on tension in our own bodies. Keep yourself in a safe position when you approach a nervous horse.close-up of a man talking to two horses - for more horses calm a nervous horse

    Ask the Horse to Lower Its Head

    Asking your horse to lower his head when he’s nervous can help to relieve some of his stress and can change his focus back to you. It’s important that you teach your horse a cue to lower his head ahead of time, and that you practice the cue regularly in order for the horse to respond when he’s anxious.

    Let the Horse Inspect the Frightening Issue

    If your horse is nervous about a particular issue, such as the presence of an umbrella or other object, then let him inspect the object for himself. Your horse can discover that the object is not harmful, and you can then refocus him on whatever you were doing before he got nervous.

    Thoroughbred looking over the fence

    Breathe

    Remember to keep yourself breathing when your horse is tense. Riders and handlers often hold their breath when horses get nervous, but that only conveys tension to the horse. Instead, keep yourself breathing and try to physically relax your body.

    Don’t Make It Into a Big Deal

    If, every time a horse gets nervous, you make the issue into a big deal, then you’re justifying the fact that the horse was right to get anxious and tense. On the other hand, if you let these nervous episodes roll off your shoulder without acknowledging the horse’s fear, you’re teaching him that there was nothing to be afraid of.

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    how to calm a nervous horse

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