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training: performance
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| Incredible, Edible Rewards for Your Horse |
| Story by Evelyn B. Hanggi, M.S., Ph.D. |
| You can motivate your horse and keep your fingers intact by following the equine research foundation's positive reinforcement methods. Instilling good manners is the essential first step. |

You probably won't be using a whole carrot to reward your horse during training, but you will need to teach him to be this polite when accepting whatever you offer.
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Have you ever been
told that you cannot train a horse by using food as a reward? Have you also been
warned that you should never, ever feed a horse by hand or you risk turning him
into an obnoxious biter?
Such statements sound
sensible and true. Yet our experiences at the Equine Research Foundation have
shown that food can be a highly successful motivator for horses when used
correctly. The operative word here is correctly!
If you don’t, the
second statement can become a grim reality. When we don’t thoroughly understand
the principles behind the practice or misuse the techniques, we can create
dangerous, unpleasant behaviors. This is why it is imperative to do it right the
first time.
| Great "PR" |
| Divide your horse’s
favorite snack food items into small, equal portions.Use an easy-access
pouch to store the rewards.Establish a “bridge”
signal which is crisp, clear and
consistent, and connect it to the food reward.Reinforce politeness,
discourage rudeness, and use a safety barrier when training pushy
horses.Watch carefully and
time your bridge precisely, rewarding only when the horse is looking straight
ahead or slightly away.Remain
aware of all your horse’s responses, and avoid rewarding any undesirable
secondary behaviors. |
Moreover, do not
confuse food reinforcement with treat-giving. Food reinforcement is part of a learning
process, whereas treats are meant to be extra little goodies. Treats should not
be given during training and, if given inappropriately at other times, they can
create all sorts of problems. With positive reinforcement—what we’ll refer to
throughout this story as “PR”—a horse learns to perform an action in order to
receive something he desires, such as food, stroking, or praise.
Horses learn
exceptionally well when we use food as a reward, because food satisfies a basic
need. When we use positive reinforcement, horses become active participants in
the training process, eagerly seeking the right answers. Dull horses brighten,
sour horses turn sweet, and the underachiever suddenly moves to the head of the
class.
Once training with
food is understood and practiced to perfection, it becomes safe, fun, and an
excellent complement to a natural approach to horsemanship.
Manners Come
First At the Equine
Research Foundation, the first thing we teach in our PR clinics is how to
instill perfect manners in the horses in the program. The goal is for a horse to
stand quietly at liberty alongside his handler when that person has food. No
pushing, mugging, or biting allowed.
One piece of
equipment that we’ve found especially helpful is a belted pouch. The ones we
provide to our clinic participants are 9" x 9" with a flap closure. We avoid
using buckets because they are too big and familiar to horses. We also do not
put food in our pockets.

Dr. Hanggi allows her Missouri Fox Trotter, Jasper, to investigate the carrot-filled pouch.
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Food, of course, is
going to be used as our “primary reinforcer.” It’s important to choose a food
that your horse likes. This can be pieces of carrot, apples or commercial horse
treats—or whatever else your horse especially likes. But it’s best to stay away
from grain or messy foods.
Food reinforcers
should be small. Your goal is to reward your horse’s efforts, not fill him up so
that he loses interest in the reward and the lesson. Carrot pieces should be
sliced about a half-inch thick; other food items should be about the same size.
And you’ll want to make sure all the pieces are approximately the same mass, so
that the horse receives the same amount of food for each correct response. If
you’re using carrots, like we will for the purposes of this article, you’ll want
to slice the narrow ends of the carrot thicker, and vice versa.
Keep in mind that
some horses will take their treats gingerly, while others will open their mouths
wide—so watch out for those teeth! At our clinics, we suggest wearing gloves to
protect fingers from eager mouths. I prefer thin leather ones. Long sleeves are
also a good idea during initial training.
Build a
Bridge Decide, too, on the
“bridge” you want to use. A bridge is a “stop action signal” that informs the
horse he is performing the correct behavior and that his food reinforcer is on
the way. Bridges (a.k.a. “secondary reinforcers”) can be words, whistles,
clickers or other signals that are crisp, clear and consistent. At the Equine
Research Foundation, we sometimes begin with a clicker but then transfer to the
verbal signal “Good.”
During our clinics,
participants start with a clicker because people frequently have difficulty
saying a word the same way every time. They may start out with a loud, crisp
“Good,” but then fade into a whispery, drawn-out “Gooooooood,” which is
ineffective. The clicker is constant, thus more beneficial to those who cannot
use verbal signals successfully.

The ERF training tools include a pouch, gloves,
handheld target and clicker with wrist coil.
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For a few days prior
to training perfect manners, we use classical conditioning to associate the
bridge with food. (Remember Dr. Ivan Pavlov? He was the Russian scientist who
first identified this response by ringing a bell and rewarding his dogs with
food to the point that the dogs would hear the bell and start salivating).
You’ll want to keep
these training sessions short, about 10 minutes, two or three times a day. Put
your horse in a stall or behind a fence (you will be on the outside) and have a
large bucket or feeder near him but within your reach. Give your bridge and
immediately toss a piece of carrot into the feeder.
At this point, it’s
vital that you give the food within a few seconds after giving the bridge so
your horse makes the association. Do not feed by hand yet. In fact, keep your
distance—right now you are just training the bridge/food connection. Repeat this
over and over and be very consistent in your timing.
At first, your horse
will have no clue about the bridge’s meaning, but with repetition he will
associate the sound with food. Our horses at the Equine Research Foundation
learn this within one or two training sessions. If your timing is good, your
horse should pick this up quickly as well. You should notice a change in his
behavior the moment he makes the connection. His ears will perk up and his head
will give a slight twitch toward the sound—this tells you that the bridge is
starting to be meaningful.
Once your horse
understands the bridge, you can train perfect manners almost anywhere as long as
the area is relatively quiet with few distractions. A stall, breezeway, or small
paddock is fine. Again, keep your training sessions short. If you cannot train
several times a day, then do a short session once a day or once every couple of
days. It will take a bit longer until the behavior is learned, but you and your
horse will get there one way or another.

Testament to how effective positive reinforcement training is, this once trailer-shy Arabian gelding now loads on request.
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Stand on one side of
your horse, facing in the same direction. Wear the pouch around your waist, but
do not try to hide it. In fact, show the pouch to your horse, jiggle it, let him
investigate it. He will probably nudge it, or you, and maybe even nibble. As
long as you and the horse are safe, try to ignore these unwanted behaviors. This
is the learning process. The horse is attempting to figure out how to operate
the food dispenser (you). He does not know what the right answer is, so he will
keep trying different things until something pays off.
If the horse becomes
too pushy but is not biting, you can block the pouch with your hand and arm to
stop him from sticking his nose into it. If he persists, then it’s okay to
gently-but-firmly bump his nose away.
The aggressive or
dangerous horse must be handled differently during early training. For those
that are too pushy or tend to bite or kick, it is even more important to think
about safety. Therefore, put a strong barrier between you and the horse so that
he cannot reach you, and use a bucket or feeder instead of a pouch. Do not work
in close proximity to the horse until his manners improve significantly behind
the barrier.
In fact, if your
horse behaves badly and you are not experienced in training, I highly recommend
that you work with a good PR trainer. It is far too easy for novices to do the
wrong thing, or do the right thing not quite right, creating more problems. This
is not only dangerous, but unfair.
Timing is
Everything Let’s continue with
the non-aggressive horse. Timing is everything, so keep a sharp eye on his
actions. His head will be moving rapidly left, right, up, down, and every which
way. Reinforcing at the right time will determine how successful you’ll be in
establishing good manners.
Watch for the moment
the horse turns his head slightly away from you. That’s precisely the instant
you’ll need to give the bridge, followed immediately with a piece of carrot.
Make sure that you bridge at the exact moment your horse is doing what you want.
If you bridge too soon—or too late —you will reinforce the wrong behavior.
Likewise, make sure
you deliver the food reinforcer immediately after the bridge. Most people prefer to hand feed with an
open hand. This is fine as long as you are not clumsy about it. You won’t want
to drop the carrot.
Bridge and reinforce
repeatedly, and keep in mind that, although your horse may be all over the
place, your own actions must be as precise as possible.
It may take a number
of repetitions over several short sessions for your horse to figure out that the
only right behavior is when he looks straight ahead or a little away from you
while he’s standing beside you. Do not try to mold or guide him—let him use his
mind to work it out. The better you are with your timing, the quicker your horse
will learn. At this stage, reinforce often.
Avoid Unwanted
Behaviors Now for the tricky
part. Make absolutely sure you do not inadvertently reinforce, thus “train,” an
unwanted behavior while you are working on the current one. Be aware of
everything your horse is doing, not just the behavior you are intent on
training.
Your horse has seven
sides—left, right, front, back, top, bottom, and inside—all with moving parts.
This means that, while you may be concentrating on his head, he may be swishing
his tail. If you reinforce a good head position at the same time he swishes his
tail, you will have a) trained moving the head away while tail-swishing or b)
only tail-swishing. Unobservant people unintentionally end up training witchy
faces, pinned ears, tail-swishing, twitching, foot-stomping, snorting, grunting,
etc.
Yet novices are not
the only ones who face these challenges. A few years ago I watched a
clicker-training demo at a national horse exposition. The trainer was
demonstrating how to train a horse to touch its nose to an object using a
clicker and carrots. When the horse touched the object, the trainer would click.
But instead of having a piece of carrot handy, she would fumble underneath her
jacket to pull out a whole carrot from which she then bit a chunk off to give to
the horse. Meanwhile, the horse had been waiting for the carrot, occasionally
stomping his foot out of impatience. The demo proceeded, and it was not long
until the horse touched the object while enthusiastically stomping his foot.
Do not be too alarmed
if your horse reverts back to mooching on occasion. This can happen in early
training. Just go back to an earlier step and reinforce a better response.
Hold that
pose
The next step is to
lengthen the amount of time your horse looks away. You do not want a horse that
looks away, and then looks right back. Your horse should look away and hold his
head still until he hears the bridge. This stage requires some finesse on your
part and must be done gradually.
Once your horse
understands the task, draw out the time before you bridge by about one second.
If this works, gradually go for another second over the next few sessions, and
so on. Your horse will probably perform the behavior and then bring his head
back to you. Wait him out until he moves his head away again, then bridge.
Learn to predict when
he will bring his head back and bridge before it happens in order to avoid
training a “double-take.” You do not want the horse to repeatedly swing his head
back and forth. Once you are getting longer “holds,” extend the time even more
before reinforcing, but also bridge some shorter ones in between.
Add Variety, Add
Challenge Okay, let’s say your
horse gets it by now. He is holding his head where you want it for several
seconds. Now it is time to add variety. Change locations by orienting him in
different directions. This is essential so that the behavior does not become
context-specific. In other words, the horse learns to perform the behavior
anywhere, anytime, not just when facing the waterer in the corner of the stall
at sunrise.
Along the same lines,
once the behavior is learned on one side, change to the other side so that the
horse responds to you wherever you are. Your horse should require less training
time on the second side, but be sure to train it just as perfectly as the first.
During the initial
stages you must bridge and reinforce frequently, but over time you will include
a variable reinforcement schedule (VRS) and start to shape behaviors. With
shaping, you only reinforce the better responses (such as when he gives you a
better head position). With a variable reinforcement schedule, you only give
food at certain, unpredictable intervals. Horses, as well as other animals, try
harder when a VRS is used. This is also true for humans—just look at the
popularity of slot machines.
Fading Out
Food Now, no one wants to
carry food around at all times while interacting with horses. Therefore, once a
given behavior is learned, you will start to fade out food so that you only give
it occasionally, or only at the end of a session. The bridge will become
reinforcing in itself. Other reinforcers, such as stroking, can also be added.
Eventually, your
horse’s manners should become so perfect that he will hold his head and body
still even when you have a full bucket of grain and a big flake of hay, or
whether you are holding up whole carrots right next to him. Picture yourself
walking into the middle of a herd, carrying hay and a grain bucket, and not
getting mugged!
Target
practice Once your horse
understands how to be polite at all times, it is then time to add to his
repertoire. You can use positive reinforcement to teach your horse to respond to
targets, which are handheld or stationary items that serve as an object of
focus.
Back in the days when
I was doing cognition research with seals and sea lions, I used targets to have
these animals stay in one location, place their noses on my hand, follow me, and
perform a number of behaviors. Years later, when I tried target training with
horses, I found they responded just as easily.
I use targets to
train horses to do many different things such as: load into and out of a trailer
at liberty; stand in one spot while untied (especially useful if you want your
horse to stay in one area of the stall while you work in another); raise, lower
and flex their heads to each side; cross obstacles such as creeks or logs;
become braver around unusual objects or events; and for fun stuff like jumping,
rolling balls, chasing Frisbees, and twirling ropes.
Most people do not
want unsafe horses, and I am no exception. But one was donated to the Equine
Research Foundation a few years ago and she came with all sorts of issues. When
Callie first arrived, we couldn’t stand near her head. She’d swing it around and
nearly knock us over. The hind end wasn’t any better due to flying hooves.
Things got even more interesting in the saddle when she would toss her head or
buck. And, of course, she didn’t know how to do anything slowly. However, within
about two weeks, she turned into one of the calmest, safest, most well-behaved
horses I have ever encountered. All it took was ground work, bonding, and
positive reinforcement. With
positive reinforcement and a strong human/horse bond—if you can imagine it, you
can train your horse to do it.
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Stumble It!
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Incredible, Edible Rewards for Your Horse
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| Bonding Exercises |
| Question: I have a 7-year-old grade-horse gelding that’s very receptive to training. I'm aware of the importance of bonding — that is, building mutual respect and trust to create a positive relationship. I was wondering whether you could suggest some specific exercises... | read |
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