06 March, 2007

Training Assessment

Clay West, Americas most lost and lonesome cowboy, showed up a couple of weeks ago and since then we have been in horse-training heaven. If you want an image to tie to him think Kevin Cosner with a penchant for keeping the house clean. Note, ladies, he is a single available man, only my horse-training buddy.

If you single females want to meet this handsome dude, just make an excuse to come visit. Well, that's already happening, actually, because suddenly this woman from Texas thought of a reason to be just driving by on her way to Denver ... and could Clay meet her for a coffee or something??..... well it's a fifty mile drive to the nearest coffee shop, so he declined, but I know we will hear from her again. She and some of her girlfriends want to come learn something about positive reinforcement in horse-training in May. This is good with me.

Anyway, as a prelude to getting really into the training of the equines, we embarked on an intensive training evaluation program. This thing assesses everything that they might have learned from standing to be brushed to changing leads on the fly. The animals did great on the ground work and failed miserably under saddle. Actually, they didn't "fail", they just had results indicating there is room for improvement. For me, it was a definite reality check... no more pretending your animals are trained, they either can do it or they can't. Having Clay dutifully writing down the assessment results, I couldn't even cheat a little and give them the benefit of the doubt.

The assessment has 105 assessment tasks on it. We gave it to all eight of my equines. This took about five long days and we still have 42 assessment tasks on one animal (Jemez Dancing under saddle) to administer tomorrow.

What I have learned: Paisley fails her tests mostly for being unable to just stand still; Cisco can fake it through almost anything and look like a trained horse until it comes to movement around his hips, then he panics; the donkeys excel at all tasks like ground tying and standing still but trotting or cantering are out; Cracker is so busy offering to do the tricks he knows that he doesn't have time or attention to respond to other requests; Chester has no directional control; and JD, well... he is just JD and mostly willing to go along as long as he can look like the herd boss.

This reality check is a wonderful opportunity to start working on the basics where they are weak and get things fixed up. People talk about discovering holes in their horses training... I discovered my holes (oodles of them) and I have a very clear picture of what needs to be done.

Clay will be here until late June and our agenda is to get the animals sufficiently trained to be decent riding animals. He started working with Cisco, who promises to be a really exceptional mount based on the willingness shown in his assessment results. The day we are riding down the canyon road, Clay on Cisco and me on Paisley will be a day of total success.

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12 Comments:

At 5:01 PM , Blogger Callie said...

Let's link
www.midwesthorse.blogspot.com
I've started a blog for people who own and love horses, whether they follow a discipline or just love their company.If you're interested, please contact me at callie.pearson@gmail.com
Thanks

 
At 8:03 PM , Blogger L said...

Where do you get the assessment test? It sounds interesting! Good luck with the training!

 
At 8:21 PM , Blogger Patricia Barlow-Irick said...

L,
If you want to do the assessment test with your critter, I can send it to you in pieces.... on the condition that you send me the results so I can study it.... it is something that I am developing. I would not want to put the whole thing on you at once because you would be overwhelmed.

Yours,
Patricia

 
At 8:35 PM , Blogger cmwest said...

I was happy to see the growing list of "assessment-related" comments being posted; somewhat disappointed in the lack of "Clay-related" commments,however I continue to hold out hope that this training project and the interest it generates also brings my much-awaited and anticipated soul mate to Largo Canyon or at least to this blogging platform and I make the hook-up of my pitiful lost and lonesome cowboy existence.
I am awaiting Fates juggling of
my position on this Blue-Green marble and looking forward to another day of equine experimentaion. Boy-Howdy!!

 
At 9:07 PM , Anonymous Kizzy said...

This here is to that Clay fella who is lost. This here is Kizzy, lets leave last names out of it for now...anywhooo, I been a' readin' with some generalized interest 'bout your trainin' project and also 'bout the lonely-hearts club you must have charterin' membership to.
I also got a peek of your pic that was made available and the Patricia lady is right: you ARE Kevin Costner handsome-like; (btw girls, I am talkin' "Kevin handsome-like" in 'Dancin with the Wolfs', not like "Kevin spooky handsome" like in 'Waterworld', if you know what I mean???)...and another plus for you Clay is you apparently don't mind cleaning up after yourself. That makes you a rare breed indeed, as we all know that REAL cowboys are far and few between.
I may just have to hoof it on over to this Largo Canyon place and check you out with my own two eyes...well, not anytime soon I suppose...you see Clay, I am a big gal;(think of 'Whats Eatin' Gilbert Grape?' the movie and I am the stunt-double for the morbidly obese "Mama" character)... and I am sorta trapped in my double-wide trailer until this Atkin's Diet plan kicks in and I lose the weight that will allow me to be placed on a normal-sized stretcher and lifted out of the peeled-back roof of my mobile home courtesy of the Ludlow Volunteer Fire Department. If BBW dont scare ya than I could see about gettin' out your way in maybe 2008, say the Springtime or early summer.
Either way, I'll be keepin' a breasted of the trainin' horse developments as they develope.

Kizzy

 
At 4:52 PM , Blogger learninghorses said...

Clay, I am sure you are special, but I have a love already.

Patricia, I'd love to see this assesment. I too, am much too inclined to see and cheat and I would love to fill some holes. I espcially need it for the training horse I have. Would you send it to me, even if in pieces?

 
At 8:15 PM , Blogger L said...

Hi Patricia, sorry it took me so long to get back here. I will be thinking about the test some more - it sounds like a lot of work, but fun! I'm a born trainer, so I've always been a sucker for tests... ;-D

I'll let you know when it's the right time to use it on my mare. Thanks!

 
At 12:43 AM , Blogger Rising Rainbow said...

Well I don't need a Clay for compansionship - got one of those, but I'm not too old to look.

The assessment test sounds interesting. Would like to know more about that. It's interesting to see how different horses (all trained by the same person) can have different holes. They are their own "horses" after all. But still interesting.

 
At 9:19 AM , Blogger Patricia Barlow-Irick said...

Actually, I am not looking to give this guy away.... he is just fine right here. He stayed with us in 2002, until a cowgirl from Montana waltzed in and spirited him away for a couple of years. When that relation fell apart, he came home to us. Just in time for what I am trying to do! It is so wonderful to have a partner in horse training!

As to the assessment test, we are working on perfecting it.... we realized a bit of a set back yesterday, so we have to reassess some of our test subjects to iron out some of the inconsistencies of data collection.

In a couple of weeks I will have it on a new website: EquineTrainingToolBox.com and I will be looking for volunteers to try it out. I will be get back to you on this.

 
At 3:28 PM , Anonymous Rita-Mae said...

I'm not too sure about this here Clay fella. He sounds too good to be true! Can he cook? I'm lookin for a clean, sober guy who can clean & cook and maybe play the guitar & give good back rubs.
And if he's that great, how come no picture? That Kizzy woman says she he looks like Kevin Costner but I looked everywhere for his picture & couldn't find one.
And are you planning on developing an assessment test for men too? I'd be mighty interested in that.

 
At 8:40 AM , Blogger Patricia Barlow-Irick said...

Okay, Kizzy and Rita Mae, enough teasing for Mr. Clay! He knows who you really are. It's hard to pretend to be a cowgirl when you aren't. Besides your embarrassing him.

 
At 3:31 PM , Anonymous rita-mae said...

Don't know about Kizzy but I'm no cowgirl...I'm a waitress & a darned good one just lookin for some fun at the end of a long shift.

 

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