Login
or Sign up Email

Amanda's Favorites
Auctions
Apparel
 Women's
 Men's
 Kid's
 Teens -
PROM!
Airline, Hotel, Car Rental
Animal World
Appliances
Automotive
Arts & Crafts
Babies
Baby Clothes
& More
Banking
Bed & Bath
Books
Cameras
& Photo
Christmas Shop
Computers, Internet
Cooking &
Food
Credit & Credit
Cards
Decorating
Education
Electronics, TVs,
Etc.
Employment
Eye Care
Fishing
& Hunting
Flowers &
Gifts
Furniture
Garden
Guest
book
Health & Beauty
Home Decor
Horse
Mall
 Art
 Books
 Calendars
 Magazines
 Tack
English 
 Tack
Western 
Identity Theft
Protection
Insurance
Jewelry
& Watches
Kids,
Fun, Games, Etc.
Kitchens
Legal
Services
Loans
Magazines
Maternity
Medical
Mortgages & Real
Estate
Movies
Music
Office
& Home
Office
Outdoor
Decor
Party
Place
Personal
Services
Pet
Supplies
 Dogs
 Cats
 Birds
 Fish
 Rabbits,
etc.
 Reptiles,
etc.
 Unusual
Remodeling
Shoes
&
Boots
Spiritual
Growth
Software
Sports
Sportsman's
Shop
Taxes
Telephone
Services
Tools &
Hardware
Toys &
Games
Travel
Video
Games
Wedding
Youth &
Kids
Hunter's Pony Farm Breeds Sport Ponies. Thank you for visiting us!
Please sign the Guestbook!
|
USING LONG LINES
By Pam Hunter
Training Article: Using
Long Lines - How to use them,
why you use them, how this benefits both horse and rider. Lots of information
and PHOTOS! See how Everette works Bonnie for the first time using long lines,
her first saddle and bridle. Click the photos to enlarge.
Many of you may be familiar with the use of long
lines for ground driving and training or re-training your horse to respond
to the bit. This article is for those who don't know how to use them, or
for a review for those who may have not used them in a while. Everette is
our trainer in this article, I am the photographer (and coach! )
You need a few pieces of equipment to effectively
use long lines in a successful manner.
-
2 - 30 foot lunge lines or long reins.
-
Surcingle or bareback pad with stirrups
or english saddle with stirrups
or western saddle with stirrups.
-
Saddle pad.
-
Snaffle bridle with bit.
-
Discarded english stirrup leather
or long belt or similar item for use as stirrup hobbles.
-
Patience.
Our round pen is 50 feet in diameter, wooden
boards with sandy gravel and dirt base. A corner of an indoor arena or paddock
can be used effectively. However, I do recommend using some sort of barrier
to prevent the horse from veering away. Otherwise you may end up running
all over the place. In this lesson you want to continue to establish that
you are in control. If your horse is dragging you around, then you are NOT
in control and he knows it!
We always begin our training sessions on green
youngsters by spending a bit using Monty Roberts' techniques in the round
pen. (Join Up(c) and Follow Up(c)) After we have worked the horse or pony
in this manner we saddle up and spend a little more time working without
lines, just taking a few turns each way in the round pen. Below is a picture
of Bonnie with all the equipment on, labeled.

As you can see the long lines pass trough the stirrup irons and are clipped
to the snaffle rings. You can do the same with a western saddle, just be
sure that no matter what type of stirrups you have, you use the stirrup hobble
to keep them close to the horse's body. In this case we have used an extra
english stirrup leather. It is passed through each iron and buckled under
the horse's barrel.
This is Bonnie's first saddle, first bridle.
We started her training just 40 minutes before this photo was taken, we have
not worked her before. After the long line session I mounted Bonnie for the
first time EVER! I was very brave!
Because you have spent time working the horse in the
round pen, it pretty much know that you want it to go around against the
rail. If you haven't worked in the round pen before, then I recommend spending
some time doing so.
The goal of this session is to get Bonnie to
respond to the pressure of the bit in her mouth without pain, without fear,
and to set the foundation for all other mounted training to follow. She must
learn to stop, turn, and back before she will be ridden. We only ask for
one step back, just to encourage her to give to the bit.
A very light touch in used, no pulling. Gentle taps on the reins
are as much pressure as we need. When Bonnie responds with the requested
task, we ease up pressure on the bit immediately as a reward. Gentle hands
make a good, responsive horse. Please remember that. This is not a battle
of wills, but a learning session for both you and your horse.
Bonnie was first walked around the arena with
no pressure on the lines just to get her used to having them on her hocks.
Mares may be touchy about this more so than males, take time with your horse.
If she kicks at the lines don't worry about it and don't get excited. Just
keep going and she will get used to it.

Here she is just walking in a relaxed manner with the lines on her hocks.
Bonnie was not troubled by them at all. In this very first lesson she did
buck when released after the saddle was cinched, but she only bucked a few
times and it was over. She made no attempt to buck when I got on her. Everette
has a line in each hand. It does take some practice to not get your feet
tangled, so take care, we don't want any injuries. You can take up the end
of the lines in a coil in your hand. Everette just doesn't happen to do it
that way. He has started every one of our horses in this way.

Here Everette is getting Bonnie to take a turn to the left. You can see how
the right rein is relaxed and the left one is showing tension. He is gently
tapping on the left line, which in turn gently taps on the bars of her mouth.
Bonnie left this lesson with NO abrasions in her mouth, on her gums or wearing
on the corners of her mouth.

Here is Bonnie at the trot. I was happy to see the extension in her front
leg as her future is in Dressage. Notice how the lines are loose, not pulling
on her mouth. To stop, just give gentle tugs, tapping the lines in a see-saw
motion and say whoa. It may take time to get the horse to stop, don't worry,
in these first lessons your horse is trying to figure out what you want.
As soon as the horse stops, release the pressure. This is the reward.

Here Bonnie is asked for a turn to the right. The right line is tapped, you
can see the tension in is in the photo, while the left line is slack. Bonnie
has yet to respond to the cue, but she does without a fight and has now turned
both right and left. She has also stopped and backed. We ask for only one
step back in the beginning.
The long line training session
lasts about 1/2 hour, her entire session is about 1 hour and 10 minutes.
She is doing great, showing a real willingness to learn. In our next session
we will do the same thing, with less time in prep before hooking up the long
lines. I will also stay mounted longer, and take a short ride around the
round pen in both directions at the walk, possibly the trot. As each session
gets better we will add more time in the saddle in the round pen and the
indoor arena. By a month from starting we will be taking rides in the pasture
without escort. Then the real training can begin. Bonnie is a 3 year old
Trakehner x Irish Thoroughbred mare. For more information about her,
please visit her page. She has great bloodlines
on her sire's side, mother's side is still under investigation.
Long line training helps your horse learn to
give to the bit before you mount. This way you have much more control than
if you just got on with no ground work. You should be able to ask for a stop,
turns, and a step back on your first ride. Use the same tapping or light
pull and release you use while working on the ground. For books on training,
visit our book store Training
page.
This training can also be used when teaching
various Dressage movements, when training for reining
(Hearty can turn fast on a dime both ways
while using the long lines, a skill he will need for cutting and
reining.)
You can also us long lines to re-train a spoiled
horse. Using the same principles outlined here, begin at the beginning,
establishing new lessons, trust and time spent together without riding. Some
horses appreciate the ground work and learn to respond better to the bit
than ever before.
The same type of lessons are used when preparing
your horse or pony to drive. There are additional steps involved to teach
them to pull, wear a harness, and not fear the shafts. Never just hook your
horse or pony to a cart without thoroughly preparing by ground work. You
could at the least ruin the horse, and at the worst serious injury or even
death could occur - to you or your horse. Driving is an involved sport, it
takes training and skill. Please be safe. For books on training your horse
to drive, visit our newest page in our book
store, Driving.
Go To All Training
Articles
Bonnie's Page |
Visit Our Facilities
Over Night
and Vacation Stabling
Get a look at our upcoming Cross Country
Course
Monty's website for information - Monty
Roberts. Get the Join-Up Video and Follow-Up video showing in detail
the principles we use when training our horses. We are not an affiliate of
Monty Roberts, we just like the technique, it basically works for us, we
incorporate other methods as well in to our training.
TRAINING BOOKS, many new just added
in our HPF Book Store!
INTERESTS:
Equine
Headlines
HPF Breeding Plan
HPF Sale
Horses
About
HPF
About Our
Horses
Book
Store
Magazine
Rack
Breeds
Care
Training
Western
English
Hunter/Jumper
 |

Hunter's Bonnie Bold
Trakehner x Irish TB Sorrel Mare
Click the picture to visit Bonnie's page, more pictures, her bloodlines and
links.
Tour our web site to find
tons of information (breeding,
training, care,
breeds,
western,
english,
hunters,
jumpers,
dressage,
eventing) about horses and ponies,
take a merit award
test, learn about different breeds of
horses and view one of our slide shows.
Oh, and please sign the
guest
book and take advantage of our
free
ads and
links |
This Page and Related Pages
Created by
Hunter's
Web Design
Copyright 1994 -2005
All Rights Reserved
Contact HPF
Privacy Policy
|
Equine Mall
Horse Collectibles
1
Horse Clothing 4 You!
Horsey Bedding 4 You!
Horse Jewelry
Horse T-Shirts
Horse Weather Vanes
Horse Mailboxes
Horse Outdoor Decor
Horse Indoor
Decor
Horse Dishes, Crystal
Horse Posters
Horse Books
Horse Calendars
Horse Themed Games
Horse Magazines
Dressage Shop
Dressage Books
English
Tack & Apparel
Western
Tack & Apparel
Books
Fox Hunting
Prints
Dressage
Prints
Hunting & Fishing
Prints
Dog
Posters
Cat
Posters
Fish
Posters
Parents! Are you
thinking of getting a
pony for your kids?
Then please read
these articles:
Here
is an interesting art exhibit - a must see for horse lovers! Complete slide
show!
HORSE-MANIA Art Exhibit
We
have a new page, Pinto Color
Patterns
|