|
Bridging
the Gap
Wil Howe, all
around horseman, having specialized in snaffle bit
and cutting horses and his wife Beverly, Richland,
Or., well known clinicians in the Northwest since
the early 80's, noted for their well broke, high
selling performance geldings,... have two new
instructional training videos coming out this
Spring. These new tapes follow their highly
acclaimed training video series, From
Foundation to Finished produced in 1996,
selling world wide. These first tapes cover
Establishing Leadership From the Ground
Up - eye opening information about
horses, their instincts, how to
read your horses behavior and how to
effectively use the round pen to get your horses
attention and win its trust. The first video
is followed by the Ten Step Program,
which they call the formula for
success. Ten building block steps that a
horse must learn in a snaffle bit which prepares
the horse for the third and final tape in the
series, Beyond the Snaffle Bit, which
culminates with the art of finishing a horse out in
a full bridle. Wils speciality. This series
was designed for bringing along and advancing young
horses as well as retraining and tuning older
horses. The new tape, however, is strictly
dedicated to a colts first ride, entitled The
Start with Control & Trust. Focusing on
the reality of starting young horses, the tape
includes bitting up techniques that soften a horse
both mentally and physically in preparation for
their first ride. Three colts, three days, three
first rides!
Anyone
can start a colt, people do it every day and there
are many ways to skin a cat. Its critical to
me that the horse gets off on the right foot, that
their standards are in the Proper
Perspective. A horses relationship with
humans and their education must be built on a solid
foundation of mutual trust and respect in order to
get a reliable, confidant, well mannered,
responsive saddle horse.
Wil is one
who believes in total control, but this control is
achieved through conditioning a horses
attitude to be receptive, cooperative and willing.
Teaching the horse to find that easy way out when
restrictions, limitations and boundaries are given.
The way I train horses is the same way I
live my life, according to unwavering, universal
just laws. We respect gravity, horses need to
respect some forms of restraint if they are to be
safe and reliable.
Their second
new tape to be out in 1999 is entitled The
Little Things That Count. It includes more of
the Howes character, practical, common sense
information. A guide for everyday handling of
horses, simple tips and corrections often
overlooked that make for a big difference in a
horses overall attitude and performance.
Wils
whole program compliments a lot of many of todays
new horsemanship clinicians, but his
straightforward approach to getting things done and
not beating around the bush (which
bores both horses and people) makes his down
to earth program different. Wil, is a strong
believer in using the understanding of equine
behavior and psychology, that makes for an easier
communication between horse and trainer, but in
addition, he also knows that to get this
simpleminded creature to perform at the
response level of our top performance horses in the
competitive arenas, it takes teaching and building
a horse to accept and endure certain levels of
pressure. Pressure comes in all forms, and what is
pressure to one horse, may not affect the next
horse. This is when learning to be aware of your
horses limitations and knowing your horses
potential comes into play.
Today many
people have the notion that they can develop a
highly responsive tuned horse by soft peddling it,
talking to them and petting them into doing what
they want them to do.
There is a
big gap in the process here. A gap that no other
clinician today but Wil seems able to address.
We see people who have started their colts,
done all the repetitious ground work and suppling
exercises with their horses, got em
doing everything from, counting, laying down,
jumping over logs off a lunge line to an assortment
of other feats that have taken them 2 - 4 years to
achieve. But after a while, what the owners
discover is that what they really want is a horse
that rides and that handles with power steering,
light, responsive and collected yet explosive when
asked.
Wil Howe
holds the missing link; for those who are ready to
step up, their goals have changed and they want to
put to test their gained knowledge of horsemanship,
but from where they are to having a finished
reining horse feels like light years
away. What Wil and Beverly have done in their From
Foundation to Finished program is to break down the
premier fundamentals of training todays performance
horses into a logical sequence for both horse and
rider to learn step by step. Through Wils
program one can prepare a horse to smoothly accept
pressure and the rigors of training for these more
intense and demanding maneuvers. By understanding
these principles, how each move or dance
step, Wil calls it, fits into the puzzle and
building the all-around well broke horse, one can
branch off, yet always return to these foundation
steps. This allows one to expand their horsemanship
horizons, no matter what the event, broke is
broke, performance is performance. Wil
Howes well instructed formula for
success will prepare a person to pursue other
talented show trainers who offer the finite tips,
training tactics and honing exercises they use to
achieve their championship goals in the performance
arena. Bridging that gap has been our niche
and were proud to help people pursue their
dreams of being good hands.
Not far from
the Snake River, at the base of the Eagle Cap
wilderness, Wil and Beverly now run their small
rustic horse operation. There they train and market
Wils well-known, quality performance
geldings, specializing in all around performance
horses and seasoned pleasure trail horses. In 1994
they started their School of Fine Horse Training at
their ranch. Specializing in the art of finishing
horses, these schools offer a rare opportunity for
the serious horseman to bring their horse or rent
one of Wils geldings and immerse themselves
in a week of intensive instruction, in progressive
horsemanship, reinsman and cow working courses.
Wil and
Beverly will be contributing horsemanship and
training articles bringing their 30 plus years of
experience to their upcoming Horses, Howe & Why
column here at Horse Central beginning next month.
They take
these 4 or 5 year colts and go to
World Champion Reining Horse trainers clinics
to learn how to put a handle on their horse. The
problem is they have completely missed all the
fundamentals of building a highly trained horse.
The training fundamentals of todays highly
responsive performance horses contradict some of
the gentle, or natural training methods
used today. Usually we see these people unprepared
for the vital information that sophisticated
reining trainers have to offer. In other words,
they are way in over their heads and the students
leave those clinics feeling a bit overwhelmed and
their specific goals not addressed because they
were unable to apply what was being shown to
them.
<<
Back to Articles
Home
|