Showing posts with label Horn Wrap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horn Wrap. Show all posts

Friday, April 13, 2012

Reader Questions: Mounting and Horn Wraps



I am having a hard time answering questions that come across as comments on the Functional Horsemanship YouTube channel, so I'll use this forum to answer a couple of short questions from readers.

Ladyirish1860 has made a comment on Correcting a Horse that Moves when Mounting.wmv: ”My horse does the exact opposite of what most seem to be asking about. He backs up!!! How do I correct that? Backing him more? Walking him in circles? Learn to jump into the saddle fast like Ninja? This is really the only problem I have with him. Thanks!

I’ve tried that Ninja stuff once without any luck. I think that your horse backing up when you mount is the same bad manners or avoidance behavior as moving away. When a horse moves away from you when you are trying to mount, the idea of pushing him around in tight circles causes him some pressure, then you can stop and offer him a chance to stand still, which is the release. When you move him around put some energy into it making him move, again this is the pressure. He gets his release when you stop and offer him a chance to stand and when he stands still then you can mount.

I recently helped a woman who horse was moving forward when she was trying to mount. Same thing. I had her put some energy in moving her horse around in a tight circle for three or four rotations, then she offered him a chance to stand. She had to do this a couple times, but within a few minutes her horse got the idea and it was easier to stand still and stood still for her to mount. Then her horse wanted to move off before she cued him, so I had her back him a few steps quickly, then offer him a chance to stand still until she cued him to walk off.


Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "Horse Training – Wrapping Your Saddle Horn": ”Can I modify this and use sheet rubber? I don’t plan on using it for roping; I tore up the leather on the horn of my aussie saddle (long story) and hoping this would keep the leather from deteriorating further.”

Many team or tie down ropers will use rubber wraps on their saddle horns as this not only protects their saddle horn, the jerk on the rope when dallied is slowed down by the rubber compressing. If you would rather use rubber to wrap and protect your saddle horn, then I suggest either using the store bought horn rubbers or getting a bicycle inner tube and cutting it into a long strip to wrap much like you would with a conventional horn wrap.

I prefer the cut strips of bicycle inner tube. You can wrap these around the horn then feed the end through wrap, or wrap in the conventional horn wrap method.

National Ropers Supply offers many different rubber horn wraps. One of their products is called “The Better Dally Wrap” and another is the “Dura-Wrap”. You may it easier to use the Better Dally Wrap as the Dura-Wrap is like a giant rubber band and the last wrap is tough to get on the horn.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Horse Training – Wrapping Your Saddle Horn



My neighbor, Paco, asked me to stop by the other day and look at a saddle he just traded for. I guess in this bad economy lots of horse related things are going cheap, horses, trailers and now saddles. He got a pretty good buy on a used Cutting type saddle. You know the type, with a long skinny saddle horn so the rider can hold on while his horse moves laterally and quickly to keep a cow in front of him.

Paco wanted to wrap his saddle horn to make it thicker and more substantial. I told him that wrapping it won’t make it any stronger, that the horn will still break off from the tree if it had a mind to do so, but it protect the horn if he’s roping and dragging from it.

Paco is not going to roping cows anytime soon, but I have explained to him in the past that rope training your horse and being able to drag objects with a rope is just good for his trail horse.

I told Paco that I have wrapped horns three different ways in the past. 1 – Cutting a strip from an bicycle inner tube and wrapping the horn in that manner, 2 – using store bought roping horn wrap, which is much like thick rubber bands and wrapping them around the horn – the trick here is to get it tight, and, 3 – Using Mule Hide to wrap the horn in a more traditional manner.

The Inner tube and store bought roping horn wraps have some give to them, so as you dally (wrap the rope around your horn) with a cow on the end of the rope, the shock is somewhat dissipated by the cushioning of the rubber horn wrap, as well as helping to protect the saddle horn from rope burns. If you are a mind to, you can get store bought horn wrap in several different colors: what I call inner tube black or tan (natural). Eventually rubber will dry rot and break off. Depending upon your geographical location, this could be several years.

The store bought rubber horn wrap is called “dally wrap” or “dura wrap”. You can also get a nylon plaited wrap that slips on the horn (with a little work I’d imagine).

I prefer the more traditional Mule Hide wrap. The trick is to get it tight. You started by soaking the Mule Hide Wrap it in a bucket of water, then cutting a slit in one end so you create a loop that will sit over the saddle horn (photo 1). As the Mule Hide Wrap drie it’ll will shrink a little, helping the wrap get tight.

You tuck the end of the Mule Hide wrap through the gullet of the saddle, from rear to front and over the fork of the saddle (photo 2).

You start wrapping the Mule Hide wrap it in a clockwise fashion (as you are sitting in the saddle). The idea is to wrap in the direction you are going to dally your rope. (photo 3).

Note: Be sure you pull and stretch the Mule Hide Wrap as tight as you can get it. After I shot these photos and finished wrapping the Mule Hide Horn Wrap, I had to un-wrap it and wrap it again tight as I had to keep taking my hands off the wrap in order to take a picture.

You continue to wrap the Mule Hide Wrap as you want it, I pulled mine slightly over part of the horn, then tuck in the end of it inside one of the slits you cut in the beginning (see photo 3). If you wrap it tight enough you’ll need a hoof pick or other tool in order to slip the end underneath the beginning slit.