There are many skills necessary to being successful with horses. As lovers, breeders, and trainers of horses, success for us on the HAAP Farm means achieving goals while building and strengthening the bond with our horses, a bond that can be transferred when our horses are sold.
There are hundreds of learned skills we use use to achieve success with our horses.
Some of the critical skills for humans and horses are:
Understanding horse body language
Understanding horse personalities
Combining the two above to develop training/performance strategies
Handling ropes/reins
Learning to ride with and without contact
Learning the basics of needed nutrition
Learning proper hoof care
Learning safe and effective ways to tie horses and training horses to tie calmly
Training horses to trailer load safely and calmly
This is a short list, and many more skills could be added, but this list is one that takes people years to learn and lifetimes to master, making it a great starting place. It also serves as a diagnostic tool. If you’re having trouble with your horse, this list can provide a guide to where the holes in your or your horse’s relationship or training might lie.
Arcing over this list is a critical perspective, and that is having a heart for the horse.
Having a heart for the horse provides us the deep well of patience, perseverance, persistence, and empathy needed to have a relationship and partner with horses. It also means doing the often difficult work of training horses to be behave appropriately when with people. Allowing horses to behave badly and/or dangerously around people is not a kindness to either the horse or people.
The reality for most horses is that they wouldn’t exist if not for the desire of human beings to own them with a specific purpose in mind. When we interact with horses, the desire to do the right thing with them must include training that might be tough, but is required if a horse is going to successfully navigate the time they spend with humans. You’ll see some of those in the skill list above.
Neglecting those tough lessons isn’t good for the horse, in my view, it only makes it more likely that horse will languish in a pasture somewhere or end up in a kill pen.
Doing the difficult training is also part of having a heart for the horse.
If you have questions for me about any of my posts, please feel free to contact me at isabellefarmer@gmail.com or click here: HAAP Farm Facebook page.
For more information about the amazing horses that have been and are being bred on the HAAP Farm, click here: HAAP farm web page.














