Illustrated Horse Breaking
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Illustrated Horse Breaking - M. Horace Hayes
M. Horace Hayes
Illustrated Horse Breaking
Published by Good Press, 2022
EAN 4064066199227
Table of Contents
PREFACE.
ILLUSTRATED HORSE-BREAKING.
CHAPTER I. THEORY OF HORSE-BREAKING.
CHAPTER II. PRINCIPLES OF MOUTHING.
CHAPTER III. HORSE-CONTROL.
CHAPTER IV. RENDERING HORSES DOCILE.
CHAPTER V. GIVING HORSES GOOD MOUTHS.
CHAPTER VI. TEACHING HORSES TO JUMP.
CHAPTER VII. MOUNTING HORSES FOR THE FIRST TIME.
CHAPTER VIII. BREAKING HORSES FOR LADIES’ RIDING.
CHAPTER IX. BREAKING HORSES TO HARNESS.
CHAPTER X. FAULTS OF MOUTH.
CHAPTER XI. NERVOUSNESS AND IMPATIENCE OF CONTROL.
CHAPTER XII. JIBBING IN SADDLE.
CHAPTER XIII. JUMPING FAULTS.
CHAPTER XIV. VICES IN HARNESS.
CHAPTER XV. AGGRESSIVENESS.
CHAPTER XVI. RIDING AND DRIVING THE NEWLY-BROKEN HORSE.
CHAPTER XVII. STABLE VICES.
CHAPTER XVIII. TEACHING THE HORSE TRICKS.
CHAPTER XIX. TESTING A HORSE’S MANNERS, MOUTH, AND TEMPER.
CHAPTER XX. ON IMPROVISED GEAR.
APPENDIX.
INDEX.
PREFACE.
Table of Contents
I offer
this work to the favourable consideration of the public, as an attempt to describe a reasoned-out system of horse-breaking, which I have found, by practical experience, to be easy of execution, rapid in its effects, and requiring the possession of no exceptional strength, activity, pluck, or horsemanship by the operator, who, to become expert in it, will, as a rule, need only practice. It is in accordance with our English and Irish ideas on the subject; for it aims at teaching the horse manners,
and giving him a snaffle-bridle mouth; so that he will go up to the bridle,
and bend
himself in thorough obedience to rein and leg.
As a personal explanation, I may mention that after having spent many years racing and training in India, during which time I practised the ordinary methods of breaking, I returned to England, where I learned the use of the standing martingale and long driving reins, as applied specially to jumpers, from Mr. John Hubert Moore, who was the cleverest maker
of steeplechasers Ireland ever knew. He, I may remark, obtained these methods, in his youth, from an old Irish breaker, named Fallon, who was born more than a century ago. I had also valuable instruction in horse taming
from Professor Sample. Having read an account of MM. Raabe and Lunel’s "hippo-lasso," as a means of control for veterinary operations, I conceived, with happy results, the idea of utilising this ingenious contrivance in breaking. I also learned, about the same time, how to halter a loose horse without running any danger of being kicked, or bitten.
Having thus acquired a fair amount of information, on what has always been to me a favourite subject, I naturally wished to put it into practice.
As I knew, judging from my former ignorance, how much men in India stood in need of instruction in horse-breaking, I determined to return to that country with the object of teaching this art; so as to acquire the experience I needed, and to pay my expenses
at the same time. I am glad to say that I was successful in both respects. During a two years’ tour, I held classes at all the principal stations of the Empire—from Tricinopoly to Peshawur, and from Quetta to Mandalay—and, having met a very large number of vicious animals and fine horsemen, I obtained experience, and greatly added to my stock of knowledge, which I shall now try to utilise for the benefit of my readers. As I proceeded through India, I felt the necessity of rejecting some methods I had formerly prized, altering others, and adopting new ones; so that the course of instruction which I was able to give to my more recent classes, was far more extensive, and of better proved utility, than what I had to offer at the beginning of my travels. The great want which I had, at first, felt was a method by which a person could secure and handle, with perfect safety, any horse, no matter how vicious he might be. However, after many kicks, a few bites, and several lucky escapes, I was able to perfect the required method, which is so simple, that the only wonder is that I did not think of it before. I may explain that the Australian horses met with in India, where they form a considerable proportion of the animals used for riding and driving, are far more dangerous and difficult to handle and control, than British stock. Had I remained in England all my life, I should not have acquired a quarter of the experience of vicious horses I was afforded, during the time I lately spent in India. It goes almost without saying, that the harder the pupil is to teach, the greater chance has the instructor of becoming expert in his business. I need hardly say, that I shall, always, be very grateful to any of my readers who may favour me with special information on this, or kindred subjects.
I may mention, that, after returning from India, I held classes in England, Gibraltar, Malta, Egypt, Ceylon, Singapore, and China.
I have much pleasure in giving, in the body of this work, the sources from which I have taken various hints.
The chief claim I, here, make to originality, is, that in bringing together the results of experience in different countries, I have endeavoured to reduce the art of breaking horses to a more or less complete system, many of the principles of which, I venture to think, I have been the first to expound, and that I have made several improvements in existing methods. The new things which I have introduced need no special mention here.
My best thanks are due to Mr. J. H. Oswald Brown, for the faithful and painstaking manner in which he has illustrated the letter-press of this book. The drawings speak for themselves.
Although I am aware that the proceeding on my part may be deemed unusual; still, in order to strengthen my words, I have ventured to submit to my readers, in an appendix, the recorded opinions of various members of my classes on the practical working of the theories and methods described in this book.
I shall, at all times, be ready to give practical instruction to persons wishing to learn this art of making the horse a safe, and pleasant conveyance.
Junior Army and Navy Club,
St. James’s Street, London. S.W.
January 1, 1889.
ILLUSTRATED HORSE-BREAKING.
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I.
THEORY OF HORSE-BREAKING.
Table of Contents
Object of horse-breaking—Causes of faults which can be remedied by breaking—Vice in the horse—Distinction between nervousness and deliberate vice—Mental qualities of the horse—Association of ideas in breaking—Value and scope of breaking—On the possibility of overcoming any form of vice—Necessity for obtaining control over the horse—On the nature of the coercion to be applied to unruly horses—Punishment—Fatigue as a means of subjugation—Effect of the voice—Personal influence in breaking—Advisability of possessing various methods of breaking—A good mouth, the chief requirement—Permanency in the effects of breaking—Expedition in breaking—The ordinary method of breaking—Breaking by kindness alone—The rough and ready style of breaking—Summary of the principles of the art of rendering horses docile.
The object of horse-breaking is to teach the animal to obey the orders of his master in the best possible manner. Hence, this art includes instruction in the advantageous application of his powers, as well as methods for rendering him docile.
Causes of faults which can be remedied by breaking are:—1. Nervousness; or the unnecessary fear of the presence or handling of man, or of the effect of any of the horse’s other surroundings, which, however startling they might be to him in a wild state, he can find by experience will not hurt him.
2. Impatience of control, which frequently co-exists with nervousness, in the same animal.
3. Ignorance of the meaning of the indications used by man to convey his wishes to the horse.
4. Deliberate disobedience. There is no doubt that sulkiness of temper is, often, inherited.
5. Active hostility, which, as far as my experience goes, is, always, the result of bad treatment, whether brought on by cruelty, or by allowing a naturally fractious animal to get the upper hand.
It is evident that vices caused by disease, or infirmity, do not come within the province of the breaker.
6. The fact of having been taught some trick—for instance, kicking when touched behind the saddle—the practice of which constitutes a vice.
Vice in the Horse, from a breaking point of view, may be held to signify the practice, on the part of the animal towards man, of disobedience—wilful or otherwise—of any legitimate command; or want of docility.
The distinction between nervousness and deliberate vice may be easily made, if we observe how a horse acts after we have proved to him that he need have no fear of us. For instance, if we fix up a horse, say, in a strait-jacket,
(see page 118) so that he cannot kick, and continue to gentle
him over with our hand, until he is thoroughly assured of the good faith of our intentions; we might justly term him a vicious brute if he kicked at us, without our touching him, the moment the restraint was removed. I may mention, in this connection, that fear of the near approach of man will often induce a purely nervous animal to kick out, if a person, and especially a stranger, ventures to come within reach. Although we may frequently find a horse kick from nervousness, he will rarely bite from that cause alone. As a verbal distinction between faults due to deliberate vice, and those caused by fear of man, or of the animal’s strange surroundings, would not, generally, be understood at first glance, I need not attempt to make it in these pages.
The more experience I acquire in the breaking of horses, the more convinced I become, that the so-called nervousness
of animals that have been handled some time, is largely made up of impatience of control, and, in many cases, of active hostility. Without, for a moment, imputing intentional deceit to a nervous
old stager,
I make bold to assert that many crafty, dangerous brutes pose before their owners as ill-used victims of a too highly strung nervous system. Take, for instance, an aged horse, like many I have met, that snorts with apparent terror at anyone that approaches him, and is ready, on the slightest chance of reaching his mark, to strike out in front, or lash out from behind, if saddling or mounting him be attempted. His nervous emotion, the first time he was taken in hand, or the first time he began his unpleasant tricks, may have been thoroughly genuine; but its exhibition was evidently attended with the result of his more or less successfully resisting control. This act of insubordination having revealed to the horse the extent of his own power, which, to every animal, is a pleasurable sensation, was naturally repeated again and again, until the vicious habit was confirmed; although its necessity might have been, scores and scores of times, disproved by the saddling or mounting having been accomplished without the infliction of any pain to the horse, however great the trouble may have been to the groom or rider. In the case I have mentioned, the fault lay with the person who had charge of the animal, and who ought to have, then and there, mastered him the very first time he shewed resistance to a legitimate order. Whether the continued failure to resist discipline was caused by the infliction of cruelty, or by the exhibition of incompetence on the part of the man, matters little as regards their detrimental result on the animal, except, that unsuccessful punishment always aggravates a vice to a deplorable extent. I am inclined to think that really nervous horses are not as naturally game
as their more placid fellows; while I am thoroughly convinced, that the majority