
Top: On the trail, its safer if your horse will stand still for mounting. Bottom: To teach your horse to stand still while you mount up, youll longe him to make him work if he takes an errant step. To ready him for longeing, youll secure his reins so he wont trip. Shown is how to secure single-loop rope reins.
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On the trail, it’s safer if your horse will
stand still for mounting. (For how to teach your horse this lesson, see Julie
Goodnight’s “Mount Up!” Natural
Horsemanship, The Trail Rider,
March ’09.) As part of that lesson, you’ll longe your horse to make him work if
he takes an errant step. To ready your horse for longeing, you’ll secure the
reins so he won’t trip.
“Tie
split reins in a knot around the horn,” Goodnight says. “Pull the end of
single-loop rope reins through under the pommel, up through the gullet and up
and over the horn (shown). You can also loop the reins around the horn, twist
them a few times under your horse’s neck, then run the throatlatch through one
rein to hold the twists in place.”
Also, hold the longe
line safely. “Neatly coil the slack in small- to medium-size loops, so the longe
line is easy to use and so you don’t trip,” says Goodnight. “And don’t wrap the
line around your hand; if your horse applies pressure to the line, he’ll take
out the slack and injure you. Worse, if you hand becomes stuck in the wraps, he
can drag you, risking injury and even death.”
As you send your
horse out onto a circle, play out the line carefully, keeping your hand free
from tangles. As you approach to mount, hold the loops in your left hand. Also
grab some mane with your left hand, so you’re holding the loops and the mane, as
you’d normally hold the reins and mane as you mount.
Julie
Goodnight (www.juliegoodnight.com) lives
in central Colorado, home to miles of scenic trails. She trains horses and
coaches horse owners to be ready for any
event, on the trail or in the performance arena. She shares her
easy-to-understand lessons on her weekly RFD-TV show,
Horse
Master, and
through appearances at clinics and
horse expos held throughout the United States. She’s also the
international spokesperson for the Certified Horsemanship Association
(www.cha-ahse.org).
Heidi Nyland
(www.wholepicture.org) is a lifelong horsewoman,
equine journalist, and photographer based in Longmont,
Colorado.

To safely longe your horse, neatly coil the slack in small- to medium-size loops. And dont wrap the line around your hand; a wrapped hand can become easily crushed.
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