Ryan Rose began his career as a professional horse trainer and clinician in 2005. Ryan soon realized that in order to have success as a horse trainer and clinician, he needed to become a horseman. Ryan has studied with many top world-class horseman, spending four years with Pat Parelli.
Ryan now teaches workshops and clinics all over the world as well as running a comprehensive training program at his home in Wisconsin. Ryan’s passion is in creating partnerships between horses and their owners.
His skills in horse development and his teaching set him apart. He also enjoys competing and training horses in ranch versatility.
Пікірлер
Fantastic video. I don't own any horses (I used to when I was younger) but I love learning and watching these for when I do get a horse in the hopefully near future! My heart almost burst when Kathleen had such a great ride on him at the end. Congrats all around!
Also from walk to trot what do you do if the tap doesn’t work?? Your horse does not look dull compared to the horse I’m working with 😂
Good info however much better to watch you work with a horse that maybe is distressed working through all of this 😉
😂 the clip of Hasbulla. He's hilarious.
What do you do next if after a tap from lead rope he doesn’t back up!??
outstanding. you are a good trainer. I subscribed and thumbs up.
It’s my first time training a horse and she is a mustang, I’ve had since August and she’s coming along really well despite my inexperience. I’m at a point now though that I can pick up her feet and I can touch all over her, but as soon as the vet or farrier gets near she want to kick at them, how do I get her to trust others?
See hiw she keeps giving her pressure when she is calm
I see passive
ROTFLMAO!!! You just have to make a video or two of movers just like this; some of the Uh Ohs and oh shits, you know some comedy movies!!! We not only learn from your mistakes, but it also makes us wanting to watch more of your videos! I think by adding some comedy, I honestly think you'll get a lot more people WANTING to come back and watch more! Thank you SO much for all your wonderful videos, and thank you even more for today's video, it made me laugh and wanting MORE!!!
24:49 29:04
Let’s see part 2
Did anyone else cheer when she cantered to the kiss?
The girl is holding lead rope in a loop - ? Her experience - pls no one ev do that! Many things to check with this horse.
this is nothing more than a slightly modified shed from Lowes. I would think the horse would feel claustrophobic.
Ok so he has a bucking problem but no helmet ? Please be very careful
Ryans is SOOO patient and gentle with owners! What remarkable restraint!! Good gravy, I don’t think I could be so gracious. Coddling and making excuses (bad saddle?? neoprene vs fleece saddle pad? Really??) just gave her horse license to problem behavior. Glad the lady wasn’t seriously hurt, though cracked tailbone is no fun. Ryan may save her life!
Assertiveness is 1/2 the equation. Other half, maybe more so is consistency. That mare was being partially corrected, part of the time. Takeaway for the horse: I can still do this behavior at least some of the time. Ryan was present to coach the rider, but when he’s not there, rider will spend lots of time with half measures that don’t achieve correction. Listen to (and DO) your trainer’s instructions or you’ve wasted your $ and his time.
What if i dont have a saddle Just a horse and a dream
Ryan, I’m fairly new to your channel, seen several of your videos. Love 👍🏼 that you distinguish ‘taming’ & ‘training’. But I’m just curious, I’ve never heard you use any voice commands as you are teaching the horses. I’m no where near your expert level, but when teaching, I used voice commands such as ‘back’ for backup, ‘pick up’ for picking up feet, ‘step up’ for trailer loading, ‘lower’ lowering head, etc. Seems to me, horses & dogs both learn to associate verbal commands with the behavior you’re teaching. Just like clucking & kissing noises to get forward movement & speed up, verbal commands also are effective teaching tools. Just wondered if there’s a reason you don’t use them?
she is beautiful
19:17 Horse: **vigorously agrees with trainer recommending down time**
noticing how much Dutton was blinking right at the end while Ryan was talking
Great 🎉🎉🎉
What a gorgeous mare! I think she's only going to improve from here. Her owner is very in tune with her.
Another very helpful Demo. Appreciate you Ryan.
This was amazing! 😮
Beautiful work! You are good at training humans as well! At the simplest level it’s the same. Trust, leadership and cooperation build the relationship.
Watched part 1 & 2 EXPECTING to see what he was able to accomplish under saddle! No part 3!!?? Let me guess, only for Patreon? Think that should be stated up front. Other than that huge disappointment, enjoyed the training.
Wow! Matching heartbeats. That totally makes sense. When my lay-back brother in law rode my Anglo Arab gelding in a hunt saddle, he used a long stirrup and rode him on the buckle. Almost like Western. My horse was calm and really dropped his head. When I rode him hunt seat , with a shorter stirrup, more contact and my ever-present anxiety, he perked up and had so much power. He was a flashy horse and was most always in the ribbons in under saddle classes. But I guess it was me that made him goofy.
MORE CONTENT! Haha sorry, I'm just completely addicted to your videos 🤭👍
What an absolute stunning beautiful mare. Congratulations on rescuing her God bless you ❤
Amazing Ryan.
I love that the owner is honest, and clever- she learns and reads the horse very fast 👍🏻 the horse will be fine in time 🍀keep the good work 🍀🍀🍀
You teach pressure as a colt
Why does she keep randomly yanking on his halter?
The horse should be washed. Little over weight too
Anyone notice the intro has a fake background pasted in somehow? All the horses are frozen. Pretty cheesy. Training is good, but the fake background intro not necessary ! 🙄
She's beautiful 😊
Her groundwork sucks there's no relief from that stick . What is she trying to teach her good grief I would be confused also
Man wish I would’ve seen this a few hours ago. Oh well. Restarting tomorrow!
This lady is too aggressive with this sensitive horse. When lunging the horse, she constantly nags her even though the horse is moving forward.
Please stop slapping your on the neck and butt. Horses, domestic or in the wild do NOT do this. Why do you do it to her? Please people if you slap your horses stop doing it. In the wild a nip, bite, kick or firm hit with their mussel is a sign of aggregation or correction. You send mixed signals to your horse when you do this.
Great video! She is so nice to share this, and willing to help others. Ryan is great with helping her and explaining everything. The way to do each step and the reason behind each step.
I adore Pony's.!
Nice to see someone address this. I've been gradual weaning for many years. So much less stress on both mare and babies.
I have a horse I can’t catch in a pasture to save my life. Can you do a video on how to fix this?
I have a question on the Bit and chin strap. (Learning about this stuff) what type of bit is that and why is the chin strap so loose?
I think it’s a snaffle. Has no shank. Therefore it is not a typical curb with shanks down to rein attachment. Tom Thumb or ‘Colt Bit’ is also a shanked bit where the reins attach lower than the mouth piece. What ever the bit. If it has a shank going down the there’s an opportunity for angular pressure on the mouth piece. In other words, we are twisting the mouthpiece as the horse holds it in his mouth. The rain shanks move back toward the chest, which also pushes the headstall attachment (a mini shank) To swing forward. It is that forward motion of the top attachment that actually pulls the chinstrap or curb chain, and an English bridal tight. Btw- Beside the rain shanks, rotating the tap attachment forward, causing indirect curb device tightening, they (rein shanks) also cause an indirect pull down on the horse’s poll by the head stall tightening. These bits all have three or four Pressure points. * the bars * maybe the tongue or the pallet (Broken mouth piece or high port curb) * the curb strap or the curb chain * the poll. The curb strap can be tightened or loosened. To fine tune the strength and severity of the aid. Well, this bit has none of that. It’s just an ordinary Snaffle bit. On a very simple head stall to boot! This strap is simple being used as a bit stabilizer to keep the bit from flopping forward, binding up, may protect ahead tossing horse from spitting out the bit, or pulling one rein through the mouth (emergency circling after a horse bolting may cause that.) So, you will see people tack up without a bit strap. Because they don’t see its function at the stand or in the round pen. But on the trail or in a you horse training Environment, you never know what could happen and it’s more of a safety device.
Typo; rein shank. Not rain shank. (Thanks auto correct! Ugh)