This DVD is presented as the utmost wild experience by Monty Roberts, the objective is to show Monty’s method and his capacity to communicate with horses… The observation is not that glorious: many lies to hide poor horsemanship behind a wall of smoke.
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Many people told me how wonderful Monty Roberts was, what a great method he had developed and I really wanted to know more about that horseman… Well, I have been very disappointed! Naturally, I started with his major DVD, that is Monty Roberts: A Real Horse Whisperer, as I wanted to understand the man, his method, and in particular his famous Join-Up.
“I didn’t create anything at all, I only discovered what nature already had in place.”
A Real Horse Whisperer, Monty Roberts
Join-Up: One of the most famous horsemanship marketing product
So many people advised me to learn more about the Join-Up to work with horses that I spent some time to study many videos of Monty Roberts, read some articles related to this practice and some “scientific” comments. In A Real Horse Whisperer, Monty Roberts explains the (supposedly) genesis of his method: Monty’s theory is said to be based on facts observed in nature _ a mare preventing a colt to come back to the herd in order to punish him. At first sight, it sounds quite pleasant, but Monty Roberts’ practice of the theory is completely different:
- Instead of a herd in which the colt wants to sneak, we have a man that the horse wants to avoid.
- Instead of preventing the colt to get back into the herd, we stress the colt to move in circles again and again…
Equine behaviourist Dr. Robert Miller: “Monty wants this horse to see him as a surrogate herd leader. For example in his round-pen techniques, he takes a line and frightens the horse by throwing it out. That frightening visual stimulus, the horse moves and he keeps it moving. And he keeps the horse moving until the horse is gone his biological flight distance, roughly a quarter of a mile […] And then the horse will start to signal with body language _ lowering the head, licking lips and chewing _ it starts to signal: “I’m in big trouble, I’ve run the necessary distance, that thing is still chasing me, I’m afraid I’m gonna die, I need help, I need a leader… and the only game in town is the man in the center of the pen.” […] When the horse signals a sufficient level of submissiveness, Monty suddenly becomes passive and non-threatening. He turns away, lowers his gaze, immediately becomes passive. This horse then comes to him and in effect asks: “Would you help me? Are you my leader? I need help.” And he then, without frightening the horse, requiredly strokes the horse. […] Then he has what he calls Join-Up.”
Robert Miller describes quite well what the Join Up is, and I still wonder how the horse world can consider this practice being efficient and nice to horses. Basically, the idea is to frighten the horse to the point where he has to submit in order to stay alive… I’ve seen more gentle approaches. Scientifically, it has been showed several times that increasing the level of stress or pain in a horse (see the barbarous tool that is a twitch for instance) will release a wave of endorphin that causes the horse to calm down and obey, in other words it becomes too numb to realize what is happening around.
“[The horse] starts to signal “I’m in big trouble, I’ve run the necessary distance, that thing is still chasing me, I’m afraid I’m gonna die, I need help…”
Robert Miller in A Real Horse Whisperer, Monty Roberts
A Real Horse Whisperer: Documentary or Bad Western?
All this DVD is built around an experience made by Monty Roberts: he, chasing and taming a mustang in the wild. When Monty is presented as a “superhero” daring to face death [sic] in this adventure, the horse is introduced as a man killer, a dangerous creature on Earth: “Those jaws can crush a man’s leg […] and that hind leg, when it kicks, it is frankly lethal.” Monty Roberts explains how he has been riding all afternoon, all evening, and all night long to chase the wild mustang he picked in the herd: “The first nearly hundred miles was fast, furious, wild, difficult… and the horse was very restless”!!!
From that moment, Monty Roberts was accompanied by an assistant to work the horse in order to put a halter on him. The mustang has been exhausted and frightened for hours until he is caught, and haltered. On the day after, groundwork starts. Here comes another registered product: Equus. This is supposed to be “a language of the body, of the body position, motion, speed of motion, and direction of motion”.
Yet, except the Join Up method previously mentioned, we see no other particular example of that Equus during this colt breaking (nope, Monty does not start colts, he breaks them). The climax of that experience is when the horse is finally saddled, then comes another assistant (a rodeo rider) who will be in charge of getting on the horse while Monty holds the mustang that is flanked by a second horse. After ten attempts of jumping on his back, the rider can seat on the saddle, and this is called a great success…
Is Monty Roberts a businessman and mythoman?
“No information has come to me to verify that anybody else before me has ever learned this communication system.”
A Real Horse Whisperer, Monty Roberts
Monty Roberts certainly was a good rider (I use the past tense as it is quite hard to find videos showing him actually riding a horse), maybe not so good a horseman though. He has built his business by marketing a different approach, that would have been revealed to him by Nature. The problem is that nothing is new in his method. His pillar the Join Up is a method used and described by his own father in a book wrote in the 1950’s: Horse and Horseman Training (page 55: ‘Training to Catch’).
And all the rest is a bunch of lies:
- Monty says his father beat him with a chain – His aunt actually published a book to say it was not true.
- Monty says he was the origin of the novel the “Horse Whisperer” – He is so good that Robert Redford hired… Buck Brannaman to assist him with all the horsemanship knowledge and scenes.
- Monty says he found a new way to talk to horses – He uses old cowboy methods implying pain and fear (see the Join Up, see the Buck Stopper)
- … Monty has told so many deformed truths, to say the least, that there is a web site dedicated to this matter: montyrobertslies.com.
One of the worst
As a conclusion, I have to say that Monty Roberts is one of the worst horsemen I read about. There are those who love horses and live for them (Tom Dorrance, Ray Hunt, Buck Brannaman and more whose names we will never hear about), there are some who do not tell the whole truth in order to make money (Clinton Anderson, Pat Parelli) and there are some who lie in order to take your money, whatever happens to the horses, this is the least of their concern…
Tip: Sources of that article can be found for free on the internet.
A Real Horse Whisperer – Part 1 of 4, Monty Roberts
A Real Horse Whisperer – Part 2 of 4, Monty Roberts
A Real Horse Whisperer – Part 3 of 4, Monty Roberts
A Real Horse Whisperer – Part 4 of 4, Monty Roberts