The Principles of Training Season 1 Episode 4: "Don't Go to Bed Angry Part 2"

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Warwick takes a deeper dive into the principle of Don't Go To Bed Angry.
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Пікірлер: 55

  • @ShadowKaiserin
    @ShadowKaiserin3 жыл бұрын

    Bundy has learned the subtle art of power napping while Warwick is talking to the camera.

  • @14Blackspirit
    @14Blackspirit3 жыл бұрын

    I always am amazed how the "difficult" horse problems have such easy solutions. I always watch your principles at least once a month and I am always amazed how this "unwritten training rules" are everywhere.

  • @kleineportugiesin9784
    @kleineportugiesin97848 ай бұрын

    Großartige Serie!!! Thank you. Ich werde sie mir ALLE ansehen

  • @BornAgainFarmGirl
    @BornAgainFarmGirl4 жыл бұрын

    Lol 😂 “I’m fine” .... great point !

  • @lyndao7356
    @lyndao73564 жыл бұрын

    Beautifully done. The principles are far-reaching, universal, and kind -- we certainly need more of that. Thanks, Mr. Schiller. Keep on.

  • @silkeklein2068
    @silkeklein20684 жыл бұрын

    Dear Warwick, I Never heard bevore in german anyone asking a horse... how much I enjoy that attitude of asking.! Greetings from Buxtehude, Germany

  • @charlottemcintyre681
    @charlottemcintyre6814 жыл бұрын

    LOVE how you pulled that stick and flag out of... nowhere!

  • @LovableLL
    @LovableLL2 жыл бұрын

    I love ALL your videos so far and I am thrilled that you share them! I'm trying to wrap my head around your training so I can really get it and I am confused by one thing... in this video, you keep the pressure so he keeps going and the answer is for him to stop. In another video where you're riding Bundy but trying to keep him going in a constant canter in a circle inside cones, like a reiner, you relieve the pressure when he's inside the circle which the answer is for him to keep going at a nice canter. What is the difference between the two scenarios. I'm sure I'm missing something.

  • @HeyWatchMeGo
    @HeyWatchMeGo3 жыл бұрын

    Thank-you Warwick Schiller.

  • @teresaedwards1591
    @teresaedwards159111 ай бұрын

    I'm using your training methods with my two 🐎🐎❣️

  • @amandaparon5687
    @amandaparon56874 жыл бұрын

    Love learning from you, wise teacher! Thank you for sharing your wisdom with us to help make this world a better place for horses & people 😊

  • @Lynn11361
    @Lynn113614 жыл бұрын

    Already employed relaxation in training my anxious mare from Part 1 with some success. Now I can’t wait to try these tips as well!

  • @louisecassidy5991
    @louisecassidy59914 жыл бұрын

    Eye-opening stuff, thanks Warwick, I always learn more here.

  • @bildahome
    @bildahome4 жыл бұрын

    Oke, thats the best explaination I ever heard. Thank you so much again

  • @katchastar5679
    @katchastar56794 жыл бұрын

    Ouch ! I got a clinton anderson add as soon as i tapped to watch your vidoe 😞

  • @sveandful

    @sveandful

    4 жыл бұрын

    ew lol XD

  • @timeenuf4200
    @timeenuf42004 жыл бұрын

    Love your videos. Thank you so much.

  • @paulacorso7954
    @paulacorso79544 жыл бұрын

    Thanks! Gonna have to review and review that, thanks bunches!

  • @RYAN-gz5sx
    @RYAN-gz5sx4 жыл бұрын

    This is brilliant

  • @paullucyk5257
    @paullucyk52573 жыл бұрын

    I love the 5 haters who disliked this video. This guy is an amazing horseman teacher.

  • @michellep9303
    @michellep93034 жыл бұрын

    Love this so true

  • @annaeriksson8185
    @annaeriksson81852 жыл бұрын

    Gorgeous Bundy!

  • @jameswilliams1763

    @jameswilliams1763

    2 жыл бұрын

    I love this ❤️😍😍😍

  • @jameswilliams1763

    @jameswilliams1763

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hello beautiful, hope you're doing great??

  • @MattyDemello
    @MattyDemello4 жыл бұрын

    I do that 1 rein stop a lot. Sometimes once they stop i'll use my leg aid to move their front over to. I once did some cow sorting with a somewhat greener horse and that horse wanted to chase those little cows lol so even if I was in the middle of sorting, once he started to run off, i'd use the 1 rein and calm him down. lol 1 time my horse bit or nibbled on a cows butt when sorting. He didn't hurt the cow, it wasn't a big bite, it was a "move out my way cow" lol it was pretty funny.

  • @RYAN-gz5sx
    @RYAN-gz5sx4 жыл бұрын

    Can I ask, do you recommend always bending them to a stop or do you then go on to ask them to stop with your seat? Thank you again!

  • @lunasummer9375
    @lunasummer93752 жыл бұрын

    Do you have any videos of horses that pull when lounging

  • @bobbihill3258
    @bobbihill32582 жыл бұрын

    I watch your videos religiously. Watching 2 and 3, my horse can walk and trot really nice on a loose rein. When we come back down to the walk she wants to go back to the trot after just a few steps of walking. Would this be because I have not let her relax first? This also happens after we canter and come back down to walk or trot, she wants to go fast again.

  • @bonananaa4611
    @bonananaa46113 жыл бұрын

    This may be a dumb question, but I'm just curious: What determines the "Stop" as being a 'relaxed' thing to do? Like, what if your horse is anxious - then you spin him to a Stop - & he Stops, but even when standing still, he is anxious (& possibly the "Shut-Down" type). He moves - he's anxious. He's still - he's anxious. I'm curious how you would determine a Relaxed horse from an Anxious horse; and what you would do in such a situation where both Options (from the video) don't work.

  • @WarwickSchiller

    @WarwickSchiller

    3 жыл бұрын

    Well first things first, you don't "spin them to a stop", you bend them to a stop, so you put a bend in their body, allowing any energy created by anxiety to dissipate, until they come to a stop, then wait for their thoughts to leave the thing they are worried about and follow the rein to their body, then they are stopped and relaxed

  • @WarwickSchiller

    @WarwickSchiller

    3 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/eWSJ2NWfnLLPgZc.html

  • @bonananaa4611

    @bonananaa4611

    3 жыл бұрын

    Aaah! That's very complex, but makes perfect sense now. So it's kinda like you're (in a positive way) distracting the horse (by bending him) to a point where he's calm. Thank you so much for explaining it further. 😀 -I'm constantly amazed with the solutions you come up with, from studying these creatures so closely. Not many people can do that! Cheers! 🙏

  • @WarwickSchiller

    @WarwickSchiller

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@bonananaa4611 Not so much distracting him but focusing his mind where his body is instead of elsewhere, just like you do in meditation.

  • @sveandful
    @sveandful4 жыл бұрын

    have you ever considered doing an international tour? If you ever came to Denmark, i would 1000% make sure to come! :D

  • @WarwickSchiller

    @WarwickSchiller

    4 жыл бұрын

    I"m in the Netherlands right now (September 2019). I think we are planning Sweden and Denmark next year.

  • @sveandful

    @sveandful

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@WarwickSchiller Amazing!! Thank you so much for aswering! Where can i sign up?

  • @natashatheriault2022

    @natashatheriault2022

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@WarwickSchiller Eastern Canada!

  • @natashatheriault2022

    @natashatheriault2022

    4 жыл бұрын

    The Maritimes need you!

  • @paulacorso7954
    @paulacorso79544 жыл бұрын

    How do you understand if ur horse has shut down from anxiety/fear or annoyance/lack of respect?

  • @MementoX1013

    @MementoX1013

    4 жыл бұрын

    Either way the response would be the same. Both are the fight or flight arousal response. Both require learning how to come down.

  • @Irkana
    @Irkana Жыл бұрын

    I love the explanation for this priciple but I still have a question about the bend to a stop: I see the reason to teach this to my horse and how nice it is when you start a horse to use this. But what about asking my horse in a really small circle? As the first principle explains I am not supposed to constantly ask my horse to move when it is already moving. When I want my horse to walk in a small circle I will ask of it to bend a lot. Am I also supposed to stop the lead to bend when it is walking in a circle as I want it to, even if there is no pressure on the reign while aksong for the bend? Or is it just a different lead for the bend to stop? I am more of an english rider and have been told in western riding you don't give much of a leg lead to keep your horse on a circle so I am not sure what tells the horse the difference between the two things I could be asking of it. Maybe this is a stupid question but before I jump to a wrong conclusion I thought I could simply try to ask

  • @WarwickSchiller

    @WarwickSchiller

    Жыл бұрын

    The "bend" to a "stop" is two parts. The first is the bend, where you take your hand to the side, your horse bends and follows his nose, THEN (and only then) does your horse come in to you thigh and they stop. Hand out to the side is bend and move, hand into the thing is stop. They are two distinctrly different things, that happen one after another

  • @comesahorseman
    @comesahorseman3 жыл бұрын

    👍👍

  • @sallyannefrancis8647
    @sallyannefrancis86474 жыл бұрын

    My Ex Race Horse Is Just Like you have explaned.. When he Bolts it comes from nowhere.. I do not know when he has shuts down. He can go from being relaxed to Bolting Its so fast. and straight. We run out of room everytime. I cannot do anything about it when he buckes I fall off.. The last time he did it one after the other. He seems to have an invisable worry cup.. I am now reluctant to get on him as i really hurt myself. My friend has ridden him since in a smaller area. They just walked. He does not seem to be in pain. This behavouir is more prevelent in the autumn. I spoke to the vet and she thinks he is a summer horse. Have you ever heard of this saying !!! We had ridden in the wind and he was fine.( or had he shut down ) The farrier has checked his feet and legs. I have checked his back and flexion. He is one of these horses that gallops around the field and bucks on the spot and does hand stands. Quite a bossy horse. Seems like a very happy 5 year old horse. What would your advice be....

  • @louisecassidy5991

    @louisecassidy5991

    4 жыл бұрын

    sallyanne Francis ......I've been around horses successfully for 60 years. Ex-racehorses need expert re-trainers. Personally, I would not have one, although I have ridden 2 very good ones. They are trained to go from 0 to 30 mph in a flash out of the starting gates. Racing does stuff to them, can send them quite mad. Any horse might buck if he feels he has loosened you, just to sort of finish the job. Also they figure if they got you off they can do it again. I can't give you any advice, only this information.

  • @sallyannefrancis8647

    @sallyannefrancis8647

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@louisecassidy5991 Thanks for the reply.

  • @calin7017

    @calin7017

    4 жыл бұрын

    Summer horse, winter horse, autumn horse ... most probably too much of a horse for your abilities. He might be happy, but you aren't so better find him another home and buy one to suit you. I wish you good luck, I really do!

  • @calin7017

    @calin7017

    4 жыл бұрын

    And one more thing: Warwick Schiller, Clinton Anderson and whoever else, all seems to have magic at their fingertips, but what they really have is a very good foundation and that comes with years of practice and consistency.

  • @sallyannefrancis8647

    @sallyannefrancis8647

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@calin7017 I have had horses all my life i am 59. Do'nt you think i know all what you have said. You do not know my abilities !!!!! Which your reply is not helpful. I know i am a silly old woman that bought a horse when it was 2. I am not a novice.. successfully i have done this many times before.... I just do not have the core strength anymore. I do not like giving up on any horse.... So that is why i have asked for sensible advice ....... which iam not getting from anyone .....

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