4 Horse

2001 Wrangler Four Horse Slant Horse Trailer

2001 Wrangler Four Horse Slant Horse Trailer

1 $2,500.00 1d 11h 50m
1987 4 horse head to head trailer

1987 4 horse head to head trailer

- $500.00 2d 18h 36m
Circle J HORSE TRAILER 4 Horse GN w DRESSING ROOM

Circle J HORSE TRAILER 4 Horse GN w DRESSING ROOM

-
$5,999.00
$6,800.00
3d 3h 4m

 

How to Train Your Horse To Trailer Load
If you're having trouble loading your horse, I strongly suggest the investment of $4.99 in my trailer-training course.

- Download and print from your home computer
- 5 days, 5 chapters
- Learn at your own pace

An excerpt from Trailer Training: An Easy guide to the Proven Methods of John Lyons:

Finally, start up your truck and slowly drive your horse around. Be careful to make your turns gradual (large, sweeping arcs) and to go easy on the brakes until your horse develops some sense of balance. (Have somebody drive just you, the human, around in the back of the trailer and you'll soon see how difficult it is to keep your balance when you can't see turns and stops coming. It'll give you empathy with your horse, that's for sure.) Give yourself (and your horse) several sessions of "just driving around" to help him adjust to this new situation. If you've got an event coming up, you will be well-served to invest the time it takes to practice in the days (better, weeks) preceding.

When it's time to take your horse back off the trailer, let him sit there a moment. Taking the horse directly out of the trailer will soon teach him that "stop" means "get out." He'll get ansty, perhaps paw, dance about or trumpet. It's best when you are working with a horse that's relatively new to trailering to simply let it cool its heels for a couple of minutes before unloading him. To unload, I simply put light pressure on the lead rope or kiss. If you've practiced unloading as previously described, your horse will have already been off the trailer hundreds of times, so unloading after his first big ride should be no big deal.

Tomorrow we'll cover additional "pre-trailering" exercises that you may want to employ, should you have a truly difficult horse or simply want to improve your leading.

Read more or purchase (read the reviews)

Other available courses include:
Stop Bucking (reviews)
Round Pen: First Steps (reviews)
Rein In Your Horse's Speed (For Owners of Nervous or Bolting Horses) (reviews)