Showing posts with label Functional Horsemanship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Functional Horsemanship. Show all posts

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Natural Horsemanship versus Functional Horsemanship

I received the following question through the comment block on the post about Jubal – the Mustang Nobody Wanted. Anonymous said, “Good site, thanks for all the information. What is the difference between what I have seen with Natural Horsemanship and what you are calling Functional Horsemanship? Is it something physical or a philosophy? Thanks again.”

I can see how you may be confused, being that most people want to give things labels, and in some cases, end up confuses most of us. The term “Natural Horsemanship”, I believe, it a copy righted term that defines Pat Parelli’s approach to horse training. Craig Cameron, on the other hand, advertises “American Horsemanship”. I have seen a lot of Craig Cameron’s philosophy and enough of Pat Parelli to tell you they both advocate approaches that are consistent with Tom and Bill Dorrance, and Ray Hunt, all of whom are credited in some way to bringing a better, safer and more gentle method to training horses, rather than the old method of man handling or making horses conform....using pressure and release,...making the right thing easy and the wrong thing hard,.......so, I would not get too concerned about titles, all of the top trainers and instructors use methods that would, in total or mostly, be approved of by the Dorrance brothers and Ray Hunt.

I can’t speak for anyone else, but I know I didn’t invent anything when it comes to horses or training. I was taught by someone else, and by many people in fact. The reason I titled this site “Functional Horsemanship”, was because I am trying to help horses through their new owners or maybe even an old owner who just grew up not really understanding much about horses. I think if you have horses you need to be “functional” with them,…able to enjoy the relationship with them and in particular riding, but also know enough to give these horses a fair life,…..because these horses did not choose the owner,…the owners chose those horses.

I have taught riding and horsemanship to small military units, who had a need to have some rudimentary skills with horses because they have found themselves in places and situations where horses (and sometimes mules and camels) were the only viable means of transportation. One Army Special Forces team asked me to give them some instruction on horses because they had just came back from a tour in Afghanistan where they sat at a base camp for four months only doing foot patrols because trucks were non-existent and none of them knew enough about horses to use the horses that the indigenous troops used. So I said something like,..”So it appears to me that you want some functional horsemanship skills” and the name just stuck.

Again, I didn’t invent anything. Sometimes I have a client or someone else say to me “Wow, I didn’t know that!”, and I always reply “Hell, I didn’t know it either until someone taught me.”

Monday, August 2, 2010

Hanging Rifle Scabbards on Your Saddle



I received a comment through our YouTube channel reference to saddle rifles. Illustratz asks: “How do you attach the rifle scabbard to the saddle?”

Basically there are two ways to attach a rifle scabbard to your saddle. One – use the scabbard latigo straps and/or spring snaps or snap hooks to afix to D rings underneath the conchos holding your saddle strings and/or one or more of your cinch (front or rear) D rings.

Two – use the Saddle strings to tie the scabbard to the saddle – this is an uncommon method, but possible.

I use the scabbard latigo straps with spring snaps to snap the scabbard to the cinch D rings on the off side (right side as you are riding), so that the scabbard is angled upward to the back where the rifle stock, and therefore the end you pull the rifle from, is easily located.

Lots of different ways to hang a rifle scabbard. Be considerate of your horse so that the scabbard is not poking him in the neck as he turns his head, or that the scabbard isn’t rubbing a raw spot on him. The scabbard needs to be positioned so that you can draw the rifle from the scabbard while in the saddle if necessary and not be an unnecessary bulk under your leg where comfort or your ability to reach your horse with your legs is compromised too much.