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Six Horse Trailers: Your Local eBay Deals | ||||
Tip: Use the search box (left column) to find the proper part, accessory or aftermarket product.
6 Tie ring loops, Horse Trailer, boat, farm, cargo |
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$22.95 | 18h 11m | |
7001 Atlas 2011 Enclosed Trailer Blue Ramp Door 6x12 New but Cheap, Minor Damage |
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$3,000.00 | 6d 11h 42m | |
7129 Atlas 2011 Enclosed Trailer Ramp Door 6x12 New but Minor Damage Charcoal |
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$3,000.00 | 6d 12h 5m | |
6826 Atlas 2011 Enclosed Trailer Ramp Door 6x12 New but Minor Damage WHITE |
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$3,000.00 | 6d 12h 12m | |
6941 Used 1990 Paris Trailer Hauler 102" x 22' 14k GVW Split Mesh Gate 6' Dove |
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$3,884.00 | 8d 17h 6m | |
6 Aluminum Tie down D Ring Loop Rope Boat Horse Trailer |
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$30.74 | 10d 23h 6m | |
Gooseneck Cattle Stock Trailer Canvas Tarp Top Cover fits 32' x 6' wide |
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$412.00 | 15d 11h 10m | |
Gooseneck Cattle Trailer Tarp Top fits 16' x 6' wide |
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$264.00 | 18d 14h 17m | |
Livestock Trailer Canvas Top Cover fits 20' x 6' wide |
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$283.00 | 26d 9h 16m | |
Livestock Trailer Canvas Top Cover fits 14' x 6' wide |
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$245.00 | 28d 12h 30m |
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:
Along this vein, a neat trick I learned from John and Josh Lyons is something you can do when you reach the point of being able to load "almost" the whole horse. More often than not, your horse will load "most of himself" the first times he plants all four feet within the trailer. He's in, but his butt is sticking out just enough that you can't close the door. To overcome this stalemate, begin placing the horse in the trailer for one second, then unload the horse and allow it to stand outside (nose pointed in) for another 59 seconds before reloading. The next time the horse goes in for two seconds, out for 58. Continue like this until you've build to a full minute. This helps because it really stokes in the horse the idea of "Let me just get on, already!" It also helps quell fear: Just as when you put on the saddle or mount up the first time, the horse has no idea if this is a "forever thing" so it's a good idea to slowly build toward your goal. When you've reached a minute and the horse is simply standing inside the trailer, calmly, go ahead and close the butt bar and trailer door, then open it again right away, pause and unload the horse. Put your horse back in for two minutes, off for one, on for three, off for one, etc. Get your horse on there for ten or twenty calm minutes and you'll be on the road, so' to speak.
If you find yourself deadlocked at any time during the trailer-training process – or fear that your horse might prove extra troublesome before you even begin, put this extra step into your training: Practice loading your horse without a trailer. Teach the Go Forward cue as described in Day One. Be careful to not "pull the horse" with the lead rope but, rather, teach the horse that your cue means "drive forward with your back legs." Next, find a surface to "load him onto." For instance, from the grass onto your driveway, from his stall to the aisle, etc. That will keep you seeing things objectively and prove to you that you have control, that you can cause your horse to walk past you and into a space you've picked. Remember, you won't be (shouldn't be) walking onto your trailer with your horse when he's asked to load; you'll say "go forward" and the horse will continue up and in. Keep that sequence in mind as you practice beforehand.
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)












