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When a horse does not respond to a cue the way the rider hoped, there is a natural tendency to put the blame on the horse.
“My horse won’t canter.”
But in reality, the horse is simply responding to the stimulus given, in the only way he knows how. If the response is not what we wanted, the first place to look is not at the horse’s attitude, but at the clarity and consistency of the rider’s cues.
By Julie Goodnight4.9
234234 ratings
When a horse does not respond to a cue the way the rider hoped, there is a natural tendency to put the blame on the horse.
“My horse won’t canter.”
But in reality, the horse is simply responding to the stimulus given, in the only way he knows how. If the response is not what we wanted, the first place to look is not at the horse’s attitude, but at the clarity and consistency of the rider’s cues.

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