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COWHORSES
& COMPETITION . . .
A Slow Start is the Best
Start
By Wil and Beverly Howe
With
the increasing interest and growing number of
participants in horse and cattle related classes
there is also the growing need for education and
instruction for these activities.
These
events of competition cutting, team penning, team
sorting, team branding and roping all require a
well broke horse with cow "savy": a unique
attribute, instinctively bred into a horse, which
gives him the ability to read, predict and rate a
cows actions. This instinct is what people in the
western horse world refer to as a natural
"cowhorse."
This
"cow savy" is a trait that is already in a horse
from its breeding. The best examples to relate it
to are cattle working dogs, bird hunting dogs or
sheepdogs. An Australian Shepherd or Blue Healer
puppy is born with a burning desire to heel cattle.
You could take another dog of a different breed and
train it on cattle for a year, but it will not
out-perform a pup with the breeding behind it with
only limited training.
Thats
just like bird dogs with their natural hunting,
pointing and retrieving instincts. They will always
out-do, lets say a Rottweiler, in a field trial.
These are bred traits that breeders have refined
over the years and the same falls true with our
performance horses of today. That is why you see
pleasure horse sires producing smooth pleasure
movers, reining horse sires that put stopping
abilities into their offspring, running horses bred
strictly for speed . . . and cowhorses are now
refined to the point of guaranteeing "cow savy."
Each bloodline possesses its own "style,
personality and expression" while working cattle,
characteristics that vary from horse to
horse.
With
the added edge in riding a "natural," now training
is equally as important in order to have a
competitive animal. All the talent in the world is
worthless without proper training. A young cowdog
allowed to run rampant and chase cattle at his own
free will, without having the basics of "come
here," and "get back," "sit," and "stay," will
become a menace and of no use around cattle. And
the same is true of an ill-trained cowhorse. Too
much freedom or too much discipline is detrimental
to keeping a horses attention level up when
working cattle.
Many
people "burn out" their good horses from over doing
it. Some horses need a little more time to
develop their own "cow savy," other horses are too
over zealous and need a different approach. But
like anything, you learn slowly, with lots of
practice, before you ask for speed. If you
dont, your horse can become scared, confused
or mad and "turn off." But whose fault is this? The
horses? No, the
riders! Educating the riders must
come first so they can educate their
mounts.
Team
penning is an exciting, fast-action event that
demands a lot of horse. Like any timed event, the
rider is always pushing the limits of his horse. He
must be able to run, turn, chase, stop and go,
while all the time keeping his eye on the cow;
somewhat difficult when the rider usually has a
handful of reins keeping the horses head too
high to really do his job. Anyone who has ever
witnessed or taken part in team penning or roping
is aware of how hard it is to stay off a
horses mouth, but yet expect the horse to
rate and read cattle.
In
cutting, on the other hand, one must turn the horse
completely loose; not only is it in the rules, but
it allows the horse to do all the cowwork on its
own.
Exposing
your horse to cattle should be a pleasant
experience for the horse, an opportunity to find
out that it (the horse) can control the actions of
the cow. Actually make it move by
approaching it, always slow at first to build a
horses interest, confidence and enthusiasm. A
horse will soon find out, if shown properly, that
working a cow is a fun game. If a horse is enjoying
what he is doing, he is much more willing to
cooperate and give you his all. Quitting the
work before a horse gets tired as also important.
When a horse gets winded, he loses interest and
gets frustrated, much like a child.
Like
anything, creating and training a cowhorse is like
building blocks. You must have a strong foundation
of basics, so when the going gets fast you have
something to return and rebuild from. If your
horse is not prepared with a good understanding of
the basics then dont expect it to hang
together when you begin to chase cows. Learning
more about the mechanics of handling cattle will
only improve ones chances of relating to
ones horse, but this cant be done at a
dead run trying to win.
Whether
youre a novice or experienced horseman,
gaining knowledge is the key to success. Developing
a good, responsive cowhorse, which can be useful in
the horse, rider and cattle events, takes time,
patience, and practice. Remember practice makes
perfection. Effective practice gets you
the winners buckle!
Not far
from the Snake River, where the desert meets the
mountains in Northeast Oregon, Wil and Beverly run
their small, rustic horse ranch. There, from
Richland, they train and market their quality
performance Quarter Horse and Paint geldings and
hold their week-long School of Fine Horse Training:
Horsemanship and Reinsman Courses and Cow Working
sessions. In addition they continue to travel
on a limited basis conducting their horse training
clinics and are featured trainers at many equine
expo events. They also offer their From
Founadation to Finished© video
series, a select line of training tack and
Wils custom designed round pens, shipping
nationwide. You can reach the Howes at
541-893-6535.
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