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Training
Age – The Yearling
A youngster is called a yearling from 1st January of the year after his birth.
Remember therefore that he may still be very young if born late (ie November)
in the previous year, but still called a yearling – hence their level of
maturity will depend upon how much you can do with them.
So, this week we’re going to cover what you can expect from a Yearling, and to
be clear I am referring to a foal that has been weaned and is actually between
6-9 months old.
A reasonably well developed, mature yearling can be lunged a little, although
only for a few minutes on each rein. As the joints are not yet fully formed at
this stage, there is an obvious risk of injury if you do too much at this
stage. An experience trainer will know how much to ask of a yearling or
whether to delay the first lessons on the lunge until the horse is 2 or 3
years old. So if you are uncertain, seek advice.
Thoroughbreds destined to race on the flat are broken in during their second
winter – while still yearlings. Many of them are lunged, long reined, backed
and ridden and have started cantering before their second birthday. Most
horses cannot be broken as yearlings, however because they are insufficiently
developed. A racehorse can be reared with a view to racing at 2 years, but
even then he may be too ‘backward’ to be trained for racing until he is a year
older – they are all individuals and have to be treated as such.
The process must be carefully planned otherwise only the really tough ones
will survive hard training without some damage.
All yearlings however should learn to obey your hand and voice and to tie up
quietly. Before going onto lunge them, you should be sure to complete your
horse’s training ‘in hand’ so that he obeys voice commands and light hand
signals on the lead rein.
By now he should walk and trot beside you without pulling against the rope. He
should also stop when you ask him to by saying ‘halt’ or ‘whoa’ (only use one
or the other of these commands, not both, otherwise you will confuse him) and
should walk on and trot on when you ask him. He should stand still until you
ask him to move on. If you press your outside hand on his flank and say ‘walk
on’ he will not be surprised when you use your leg aids later on to give a
similar signal.
What you have to be aware of is that all during this time your horse is still
growing and developing. As such his behaviour will also change, so don’t be
surprised if exercises and lessons he performed when he was much younger, even
suckling perhaps, no longer work. His rate of growth will show you how much he
is changing, and you must expect his behaviour to change too, which is why you
must make sure that you finish his hands on and voice training properly before
you move on to anything more complex and challenging.
Remember the main schooling aim for a yearling is primarily to establish the
relationship between you and your horse. With this in mind the important thing
to bear in mind is that what you do with him is not as important as the fact
that you do something with him at all – trying to do every exercise perfectly
and overtraining him to do this is not the objective – working with him gently
to get him used to you and used to doing some training is more important than
the technicalities of how well he does the exercises.
From the author:
I have written a book on horse
health, as I firmly believe that prevention is the best cure. If you are
regularly checking your horse to see that he’s in tip top condition then at
least you will know that any accident has not been caused or worsened by an
existing health issue. Check out this book
here.
My site
at
www.anyhorsebackriding.com has a lot of other useful tips and
information and the back issues of my News Letters can be found
here
The list of my other articles can be found
here

© 2006 Roger Bourdon

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