In my lesson yesterday the horse I was riding refused the jump, once it was my fault as I was tired at that point and not fully focused. The second time my RI told me that it was the horse's fault, and said "you're mad at her now so give her a smack on the shoulder!". In reality I wasn't angry with the horse at all. We were both tired towards the end of our jumping lesson and I thought "no big deal, I'll just circle around and use more leg when doing the jump again to encourage her!". I tend to carry a whip in my lessons just as a back up. If needs be I lightly tap the horse's shoulders if I get a messy canter transition where it's just a faster trot and my legs aren't strong enough.
I think using the whip one minute for encouragement and the next minute for punishment doesn't make sense. My RI tells me I have to be more firm with the horses or I will keep getting refusals, and perhaps that is true but I don't think smacking them hard when they refuse a jump is the way to go about it. I can't bring myself to punish them that way. I would rather stop riding altogether as goes against every fibre of my being.
So my question is, should horses be punished with whips AT ALL or should they simply be firmly encouraged to do the right thing with leg aids, vocal encouragement etc to perform the correct task? Shouldn't we always set them up for success instead of scaring them with the whip? Also, if the timing isn't perfect for a punishment I don't think it makes sense to the horse, she doesn't know what she is being hit for.
Sorry this is so long winded but I am really torn with this issue. Basically I think light, consistent taps to encourage them to find the right answer but NEVER for punishment. Same way as you wouldn't kick a horse in the side for being naughty. Or perhaps you would... I don't know. It's the easy way out and a good way to vent a rider's anger at times but not the real solution. I would love to hear your thoughts.
I think using the whip one minute for encouragement and the next minute for punishment doesn't make sense. My RI tells me I have to be more firm with the horses or I will keep getting refusals, and perhaps that is true but I don't think smacking them hard when they refuse a jump is the way to go about it. I can't bring myself to punish them that way. I would rather stop riding altogether as goes against every fibre of my being.
So my question is, should horses be punished with whips AT ALL or should they simply be firmly encouraged to do the right thing with leg aids, vocal encouragement etc to perform the correct task? Shouldn't we always set them up for success instead of scaring them with the whip? Also, if the timing isn't perfect for a punishment I don't think it makes sense to the horse, she doesn't know what she is being hit for.
Sorry this is so long winded but I am really torn with this issue. Basically I think light, consistent taps to encourage them to find the right answer but NEVER for punishment. Same way as you wouldn't kick a horse in the side for being naughty. Or perhaps you would... I don't know. It's the easy way out and a good way to vent a rider's anger at times but not the real solution. I would love to hear your thoughts.