Horse Hands

Horse Hands
Horse Hands

Riding with soft hands is an awesome goal, and your horse will thank you for it. In this training tip, I’m going to give you both some simple physical exercises and also some fun mental exercises to help you achieve this goal.

Here are 2 physical exercises.

1. Tie two reins or ropes or even two pieces of baling twine to a sturdy fence. Hold the ropes as if they are reins. Take up a contact of at least 10 pounds in each hand. Then, adjust the weight of the rein by softening your arms. Go from 10 pounds to 5 pounds back to 10 pounds and then to 2 pounds. Once you get this feeling of adjusting the weight of the reins you can transfer the same technique to your riding when you feel yourself getting too strong.

2. The next exercise is a relaxation exercise. The more tightly you hold a muscle, the more deeply it relaxes when you let go. So let’s tire out those strong hands. With your fingers curled around the reins, clench your hands into fists. Increase the tension until your hands are shaking. Then relax and let go. Do this many times each day, and eventually you’ll be able to recreate the relaxed feeling without having to tighten your hands first.

Now let’s focus on some mental training exercises. We’ll do this through the use of imagery.

1. Imagine that instead of holding the reins, you’re holding a baby bird in each fist. You don’t want to hold too tightly or you’ll crush the bird. The important thing is to make your mental picture very vivid. What kind of bird is it? What color? Do its feathers feel like soft down? Is it chirping a little?

2. Pretend you’re holding a raw egg in each hand. If you squeeze too tightly, you’re going to have a real mess!

3. Imagine you’re riding without a bridle and with only a silk thread from your hands to your horse’s mouth? Your horse responds to the lightest touch.

4. Imagine the bit is a razor blade. You need to have a delicate touch or you’ll cut your horse’s mouth.

These images should get you started. The best mental picture, however, is a very personal one. So find the “soft hands” image that resonates with you. Then, visualize the picture both on and off of your horse on a regular basis.

Are you sick and tired of complicated and confusing training techniques? Are you frustrated by negative emotions like fear and lack of confidence? Would you like to be trained by a Three Time Olympic Coach? Learn how by going to: http://janesavoie.com/

For more info on how visualization can help you become a better rider, check out The Rider’s Inside Edge CD’s and It’s Not Just About the Ribbons at http://janesavoie.com/shop/index.html

Can someone explain “hands” when measuring a horse?

I am not a horse person, but I was just curious… what does it mean when a horse is “fourteen hands” or something similar? I know it’s a measurement of size, but how does that work?
Got it. Thanks.

A hand = 4 inches.

So a horse that is 14 hands, would be 56″, because 14×4=56. So if a horse is X number of hands, you just multiply that number by 4 to get how many inches it is. If a horse is 14.2 hands, it is 2 inches taller than a 14 hand horse. So it would be 58″.

And just like in any other unit of measurement, after 14.3 hands it goes to 15 hands, because that would be 4 inches, which is what a hand is.

Do you understand?

AN HORSE – Warm Hands

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