Rope Leading: Establish a connection with the horse

by howdy9533
Published: Updated:

At this stage, the horse should follow all your moves. There should always be slack in the rope, as you are not supposed to drag it.

Rope leading is not an exercise on its own, as you lead your horse everyday from the pasture to the paddock, from the stall to the arena, from the trailer to the track, etc. Yet, leading a horse implies that the horseman or horsewoman is in charge and the horse follows the pace. The following explains how to teach your horse to respect your leadership in all circumstances.

Position

Obviously, leading means the horseman should come before the horse. Yet, there is no definitive good position: be right in front, or at the shoulder, or both at the same time… it does not matter. The only important parameter to take into account is the position of the horse relatively to yours: he ought to respect your personal space, and never crowd you.

Security

Since you may have to lead a colt or a ‘wild’ horse from time to time, you should consider to put yourself in a safe spot. In such occurrence, the position is important and you should stay by the head of your horse slightly in front of him, the hand holding the rope raised in order to push the head away if your horse tries to crowd you.

Process

A good way of leading consists of three steps: the horse starts as soon as you walk, he stays behind you all the time, and he stops as soon as you do.

  • Start: If your horse does not start when you walk off, you should pull on the rope and wait. Wait for your horse to switch his weight forward. Later, keep pulling until your horse starts to walk toward you. Pretty soon it will follow you as soon as you start to move, and you will not need to pull anymore.
  • Follow: After you worked the Lunging exercise, your horse will follow you easily, that will not be an issue. Yet, it can happen that your horse tries to go faster and pass you, then you should stop and back him up until he gets back behind you.
  • Stop: A good exercise to prepare this step is to back your horse up. Next, when you walk with your horse and stop, if he does not stop, you should back him up a few steps. Start to walk and try again until your horse stops right with you.

Q&A

What if my horse pushes me when I’m leading him?

Once you have gone through the Lunging and Backing Up exercises with your horse, such behaviour should not happen anymore. What might happen by ‘accident’ is that your horse would not be paying attention, and bump into you: do not let this happen, back your horse up 10 metres to wake him up, and make sure he is focused on you all the time. The more time you will spend your horse, and the less such situation will occur.

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