Teaching my 3yr old how to cross the Teeter Totter
Үй жануарлары мен аңдар
In this video Ryan teaches his 3 year old horse Onyx, how to manage his emotions while going over the Teeter-Totter.
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Пікірлер: 109
Thanks for watching! If you’d like to see more training videos and ask me specific questions about your horse go to www.patreon.com/ryanrosehorsemanship
@sewingstoryprojects6178
2 жыл бұрын
I can see that you are specifically not rewarding him when he does it right by saying "good boy" or a pet or rub.....I am guessing because that is not how horses relate to each other. How does he know he is doing the right thing?
@case2696
2 жыл бұрын
I'd love to learn how to build a teeter totter like yours. hint hint?
@bayleydonahue745
Жыл бұрын
The release of pressure is how he knows. When Ryan let him sit and think about it for a minute is when he learned to change. Ryan goes from being active when the horse is not on the teeter totter to being quiet(no physical activity)
@rjordan2211
11 ай бұрын
I thought this was a great training video. I was valuable for me because we were able to see the horse working through this challenge from the beginning, and because we were able to see the whole process, not just the "cut to the chase" ending. That makes it very valuable as a training video. I also appreciated the comments and explanation that you gave as the process was unfolding. Very nice training video.
This is exactly the kind of video I prefer. This shows what most students horses look like and you show and explain so well what the horse is doing and thinking. Thanks so much for showing a horse being trained for us mere mortals.
I enjoy the raw real life situations! It helps me to learn and understand things so much more with my own horses. This is the exact reason I started watching you channel in the first place! Please continue these sessions. Again thank you for sharing/ teaching your knowledge and training techniques..
Really cool seeing horses that don't already know how to do something, then how they learn! So much more potential for OUR learning as the viewers. Thank you for making this! My horse (still) struggles with walking over tarps and water (he's not a fan of getting wet lol) but hadn't even considered the idea of trying to encourage his speed slower when crossing using the stick/lunge whip as guidance. I've gotten him to walk over without jumping (usually) but is still rushed and fearful vs a collected understanding, so more practice is needed lol But always so much to learn from your videos, awesome stuff!!!
Watching your responses to your horse is as big a lesson as watching how to work the horse.
I absolutely appreciate seeing you work your horse through a real situation. It makes it so much more relatable to situations I (we) will encounter with our horses. Explaining it as you work through it is very helpful too. Love it! Thanks!!
I love those “moments” when the penny drops too. It’s the best feedback evah!
I appreciate the example of how firmness does not jeapodize the relationship or confidence in your youngster. It shows us just the opposite. I really appreciate your talent and time and teaching ability.
I love your 'real time horse training'. I get such a better sense of how to control my own impatience. As a teacher, i also understand the importance of 'chunking'. Excellent teaching!
Its awesome watching the process happen and how you train a horse who has a different idea. I don't own horses, I just love watching them
I'm sure he glanced at the camera as if to say "you see that?"... gorgeous boy
Ding ding ding I love that winner winner chicken dinner moment when you can see they have grasped the idea it is very satisfying that is so awesome what a beautiful horses too
Smart fella…he went off the side so as not to go across. Smart and brave.
Really loved this one! What a great practical example to see. And hes still wonderful for a three year old. Great job Onyx!!!
To tell you the truth, I wished I had known all your teachings when I was beginning to ride my horses. I've made soooo many mistakes and did it the wrong way, I would love to apologize to my horses to probably messing them up. Thank you to help me understand horses better.
My horse is definitely a left brainer, he’s never afraid but he’s always a little bit stubborn and opinionated. He’s super safe though. I was packing him one time when he accidentally hooked a dead tree on a narrow trail and the tree tipped over on his back! Not hard, just leaned over on him enough to catch the saddle and stop him. I was walking directly in front of him, some horses would have just run me over but he stood patiently while I scrambled around in the thick brush to get the tree off. I will put up with a little stubborn if it means we are safer.
From terrifying to terrific! With a little guidance yet allowing us to think, we can do!
Loved this! I have a rescue mare who gets worked up easily on her own. Like you said she's very committed to her idea and gets into that adrenaline rush, but she's also instantly defensive when a flag/stick is used, she is 10x better and learns faster without trying to use an added tool. That being said I'm still finding it hard to get her to think through situations and find the answer on her own without working herself up. She tries really hard and looks to me for answers, but when it comes to making decisions on her own she really gets into that adrenaline state very easily, and I lose horse quick. Normally with anything like going over a ditch, she jumps instead of walks and the trailer depends on the day; it could take 15 minutes - 3hrs and a now sometimes not at all. We have done clinics with a great trainer and he can work her through things faster, but with me, there is something about it where she just works herself up very easily, no matter how calm and patient I am. She almost tries to force you to get into a fight with her and when I don't it's almost like it confuses her that she's not getting reemed for making a mistake and she just shuts off and goes into that heightened state. I'm not sure if you have any more videos addressing this or not? I do follow your channel quite a bit, I really relate to your training methods, but if not, more videos on strategies and helping them learn to regulate their emotions, and build confidence in themselves would be so great! 😁
Excellent video. You are a stellar “explainer”.
@ryanrosehorsemanship
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
I've been struggling with a mar that's afraid of the trailer, your comment just felt like a huge breath of fresh air in what I can try next with her. Thanks for all your videos they're such gems
What a beautiful horse. Amazing colour. He seems to be a logical thinker. Great video. You have amazing patience and are very kind to horses Ryan. It was nice to see you riding, as most of your videos you are doing ground work. I can see that you are a very good rider.
Loved watching your live demo with your beautiful horse. Keep these types coming. ❤️🐎
Walking over a spring mattress is pretty exciting for some ponies
I would have to say my horse pushed through her fear while learning what round pen work is… by jumping through the gate panel, landing on the top and jumping through the rest of it. Nothing got hurt … just a damaged gate. And I gained a healthy respect for my big draft! 😂
Thank you for another great video. It is very helpful to watch a horse learn something new while listening to you explain the process.
Thanks for this , I have been working with my OTTB and I had to back up in teaching him because he will push through his threshhold like you say and make a huge mess out of the project but he is getting it now, He is very 'right brained' and what I had to do was monitor how slowly he loaded the teeter totter with each foot and have to feel the shifting balance so he wouldn't hurry off.. wish I could have seen this before I started would have saved him and I a bunch of drama!!
Trying to get your ways into my piano students. Maybe they’ll watch this! This horse is sooo exactly like the minds of my piano students. Cool!
He’s a gorgeous boy.
@ryanrosehorsemanship
Жыл бұрын
I agree
Awesome awesome awesome! Such a fantastic lesson and it was so helpful watching the horse work through it. Thank you!
Loved this video! I was so proud of him when he went on the up-side! I could almost see the working out in his mind. Awesome!
What a thrill! I was so happy for this horse. I'm a sap.
It IS good to see the training from beginning, he’s a good boy!
What a gorgeous horse he is!!!!
What a good trooper! You should be proud of that boy. Thanks for showing us this wonderful video of real life so packed with great horsemanship info. You’re making the horse world 🌎 a better place with more knowledge!
I learned so much more from the way you did this. Thanks!
You make it so easy to understand! Thanks Ryan! You’re Awesome!
That was awesome!
I appreciate every single thing u teach! U r so amazing! I love to watch u! I have watched alot of horse trainers and u by far r the very best! Like I said many times u r a horse whisper Ryan Rose!
We have a tire filled with sand and one horse I'm training tries to launch herself over the tire rather than step a foot on to it. I'm sure that's a good one to share about 😊. Really enjoy watching your videos and how you explain things. I'm also curious about the large tractor tires you have set up in the background. What is that obstacle?
Great video!! Thanks Ryan🙏😊
This was excellent!! Thank you
Nicely done! 👍
Great video, love that you showed the whole process.. So many opportunities for me to learn from you. Thanks!! My personal "discussion" with my horse was mud. He is okay with water but slippery ground made him panic. Took a while to change but we're good now.
Ohhh I like this horse.
WELL DONE AS ALWAYS.
Such a nice horse! I really enjoy your videos and I am learning so much. There is a shallow ditch in my pasture that I walk my horse over. He does it all the time when he is out grazing but if I lead him or ride him over it, he wants to jump it.
What a gorgeous horse! Congrats!
This is the stuff! Thanks🤓
I'll be trying this soon!!! Awesome timing!!
A pleasure watch.
Nicely done
Loved it. Thanks. Manage emotions.
Thank you!!
Good job Onyx! 🥰
Love the “live” teaching videos. Keep them coming :)
Nice 👍 Ryan thanks a lot
This was an extremely great video! I learned lots. Thank you for sharing this.
That is a beautiful horse
Beautiful horse.
Thank you for this video. I love real time horse training. I wish I should this years ago.
That was GREAT 😎
This is a great video and it was so nice to see him so confident at the end. He’s a beautiful horse too, love his color. 💝🐎
Really helpful. Coaching the horse how to manage their emotions ❤Love it 👍🏼
That obstacle would be white cows!! I know sounds crazy but that’s his nemesis and he is a high adrenaline boy interesting to see especially when it’s a baby white cow.🙀🤣🇦🇺🐴
He is a beautiful horse...
I'm just lazy enough to put a couple of coral panels on either side of a teeter totter at the gate they come through for a sweet feed treat. Maybe they can figure it out for themselves while I sit in the air conditioning? 😄
@arribaficationwineho32
2 жыл бұрын
I agree especially when I read abt horses that are hard to catch. Never an issue when you shake a feed bucket
Yes I love the real life stuff!
Nice job Ryan, my horse rushes off that too. I seldom have a chance to use one but, never got a chance to really work with him on that.
👍thanks for watching
Great job!! Johnny and I watched together, he was like why is Uncle Ryan in Wisconsin and not Florida….
Ryan could you give us building tips on making our own teeter totter? Is there a specific type of wood we need to use?
@hillbillylivestock4162
Жыл бұрын
A link for good Plans would be great! Lots of sketchy designs out there. (No pun intended.)
Really enjoyed watching this, thankyou Ryan. My nemisis is the water box 😳
What I find fascinating is the difference between a horse and a dog. When my dog approaches a 'scary thing' I also need to build his confidence, incrementally. But I have never had a dog push through his fear, voluntarily - as Onyx did. While he was still uncertain about the teeter part - he kept trying to get back on it. My dogs will only do that after they have overcome their fears - at the point when it's now fun. BTW, I like these short videos - I rarely have time to watch half hour+ videos: this was short and to the point!
I like to watch you work the horses. You are always calm with them enjoy your training videos very much. The teeter-totter colt is such a beauty. What colour is he classified as?
Nice 🤠
Onyx is beautiful!
I have had the same problem with the titer totter and a creek.
Sure like watching the horses in training.
Great video!!! I learned a lot! Can you do a video of loading a very bad loader into a ramp trailer????? Thank you 😊
it was cold out and I warmed my horse up then threw a warm horse blanket on her back and it fell off and scarred the pants off her and it took me almost an hour to get her to walk up to it ( I have it all on video too on my channel)
Working through a problem slowly, “chunking “ are fantastic! If you want to get something done quickly, go slow!!!
I wish you would showcase a horse learning to sidepass INTO a gate under saddle. My mare side passes really well, except she worries and will not push toward a gate.
my horses thresh hold is her stall. She hates going inside. Even in the summer we have to put her in every now and then.
I hope to find a man like you one day 🥲
Splash box
do you have any videos on how to build one of these better totters
👍🤠
Can you show us the barn
Thank you for the tips. Can you tell me what the teeter totter dimensions are?
You are a awesome horseman but maybe use a bitless bridle or bosal for your horses. Other then that amazing job!
I need to know how it's made
My boy was going to plow down an embankment at a very high rate of speed and I was afraid he was going to try to jump it and we would have been in a real bad situation. I had to one-rein him and dismount and let someone pony him across.
Crossing water a creek a river or a small ditch
I know it is important but what are your thoughts on when to use sport boots?
@pamelacarlson5114
2 жыл бұрын
Until Ryan is able to get to your question...sport boots on a rigid obstacle like this wooden one protects your horse from thinking the obstacle bit him (and more serious injury) if he were to scrape his leg on it.
hi ryan! you might have done a video about what im about to ask and if so please guide me to it. my horse is a horse who does not enjoy work. im a beginner. i try to leave our sessions on a good note. so what he does if im trying to do something with him, and im clear and get the point across well, he gets stuck? like if i work on sidepasses for idk 10-20 min in both directions and then call it quits, next time i get on the only thing he does is sidepasses. like he cant differentiate between the sidepass ques or me just lifting the rein and its been puzzling me. he does the same with experienced riders to. and.. I think its really charming but I also get a bit annoyed at the fact that I cant understand why he is like that. he has a pretty sour attitude with work, but when he GETS it he loves doing that thing. and only that thing. and as soon as you try something else he gets sour again. but then when he gets it he loves doing just that thing. i hope you can bless me with some knowledge. he is a left brained introvert, indeed in poor fitness atm but even when he was fit he did this a lot. you can easily unteach the sidepass thing but then when you ask for it again it's like you have to teach it from scratch again. it confuses me a lot. what am i missing? he doesn't quite want to work with me, I've experienced from doing a lot of groundwork with him. and idk. like he listens to everything but sometimes you have to go to scale 4 in asking for a flex while sometimes it's just a 1. it's so different. if you read this and know something please help me 🙈
Wouldn't that be he's afraid of the teeter-trotter? Lol
Show him what you want him or any horse to do. Lead, body language is a good thing to do to. Not just done by using flag or whip, using the rope is better. Especially being afraid of the bridge.
What the hell is a teeter totter ??? oh ok I see now LOL
Put down a lot of korean and world's stock. And d'ont raise it up. This is right in Jesus Christ~! 🐢..... .. ....
Dude, please wear a helmet.