#34 Positive Reinforcement Training with Adele Shaw of The Willing Equine
Adele Shaw is a Certified Horse Behaviour Consultant, an endorsed trainer with the World Bitless Association, as well as an internationally recognized mentor and trainer focused on creating a positive relationship between horse and human through science-based training and care practices. This holistic approach examines the horseâs environment, lifestyle, and physical and mental soundness to ensure that the horses are not simply surviving, but truly thriving in their life and relationship with their human caretakers.
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While training with positive reinforcement is fairly mainstream in a lot of areas of the animal training world, it's still in its infancy in the horse community. Adeleâs mission is to make this information accessible and achievable for the average horse owner through The Willing Equine.
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In this episode, we discuss misconceptions, advice, exercises, and so much more related to positive reinforcement training.
Podcast Transcript
This transcript was created by an AI and has not been proofread.
[SPEAKER 2]On this weekâs episode, weâre talking with Adele Shaw of The Willing Equine.
[SPEAKER 1]Positive reinforcement, just like negative reinforcement, is not a method by itself. There are a million different ways to apply varying amounts of positive reinforcement into your training methodology.
[SPEAKER 2]Welcome to the Equestrian Connection podcast from wehorse. My name is Danielle Crowell, and Iâm your host. Adele Shaw is a certified horse behavior consultant, an endorsed trainer with the World Bitless Association, as well as an internationally recognized mentor and trainer focused on creating a positive relationship between horse and human through science-based training and care practices. This holistic approach examines the horseâs environment, lifestyle, and physical and mental soundness to ensure that the horses are not simply surviving, but truly thriving in their life and relationship with their human caretakers. While training with positive reinforcement is fairly mainstream in a lot of areas of the animal training world, itâs still in its infancy in the horse community. Adeleâs mission is to make this information accessible and achievable for the average horse owner through her business, The Willing Equine. Adele, welcome to the wehorse podcast. Iâm really, really excited to have this conversation with you.
[SPEAKER 1]Hi, thank you so much.
[SPEAKER 2]So youâre very well known as a positive reinforcement trainer, of course.And I would love to go back to the very beginning and talk about what inspired you to get started with positive reinforcement in the first place.
[SPEAKER 1]Yeah.Uh, so it was actually one horse that came into my life and You know how we often have those individual horses that just really change things for us.And of course the horses that had come before her were very important and taught me so much, but she was one of those that like changed everything for me.Um, her name was tiger and I got really stuck between a rock and a hard place with her based off of, you know, All of my past training and what I knew, and I had a lot of experience at that time.I was teaching professionally.I was doing some, um, riding lessons, things like that, but also had been working with peopleâs horses a little bit.Um, I had been riding competitively in both hunter jumper and massage for a long time. And I had many years of experience with horses.Iâve been riding since I was eight and Iâd worked with, you know, some of the really big name programs.I had worked under many local, very popular trainers and even more internationally recognized.I had done clinics and stuff with Olympic riders and anyway, so I had a bunch of experience.And so then I get this horse and sheâs. Nothingâs working, right?Nothing was working that I knew.And I was just kept hitting a wall with her and she was very dangerous to be around and on.I had also fully exhausted medical searching, you know, saddle fitting.She had custom saddles.She had custom bridles.She had, um, the best hoof care we could find.Uh, she had, I was meeting all of her basic needs, like the, you know, the freedoms like forage friends, all of that. and got body work regularly, worked with multiple body workers.What else we did, we worked with lots of different vets and I was just kept hitting this wall with her and she was really dangerous to ride and it took a very long time to catch her out of the pasture, sometimes like couldnât at all. And, uh, so I was like, man, somebody has got to change because I either have to sell this horse or put her down.Um, cause I couldnât just keep her.Cause at the time my mentality was that a horse needed a job.So her just sitting in my pasture, wasnât going to work for me. And a lot has changed since then.So I had some influences, some friends from social media.This is back when Instagram was more like it originally was, and where people actually really developed, you know, relationships with other people and connected and um they were had been dabbling with clicker training theyâre like why donât you try it with her and i was like no youâre never supposed to feed horses by hand like that had been drilled into me and iâm like this isnât gonna work ironically i had been clicker training with dogs for quite a while at this point i was competing in agility with dogs and um i was like but sheâs a horse thatâs not gonna work uh so but i was like you know what what do i have to lose i donât have anything to lose at this point so Yeah, so thatâs how I started experimenting with it.A little bit of a spoiler alert, it didnât go well at first.I actually gave it up after a couple of months, because I thought I had actually made her work.So I was like, before I started with what do I have to lose?And then I realized, oh, I have more to lose.I created a bit of a treat monster, cookie monster, whatever you want to call them.And she was just even more anxious than before, because I was Thatâs a whole topic there.But, um, am I, so I gave it up for a while, took a break and then my friends were like, maybe you should try again, but with some professional coaching and I was like, novel concept.And so, um, yeah, I gave it a try again.And that Iâd like, Iâve never looked back since then.And so she was such like that moment and working with her just changed the trajectory of like my professional career and even my life.Like itâs impacted my life tremendously.
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[SPEAKER 1]Iâm a big believer that many horses are that horse or could be that horse but we have to get to a certain point where the stars kind of align and itâs like the right horse and then weâre ready to change for this horse.I think thatâs really what happened with this mare is like I had had many horses before her that could have benefited tremendously from what I do now and they would have like it would have been great.And I wish Iâd been able to offer that to them.But it wasnât until her that I was in the right position.Like I was ready to change.I didnât think I was and it was painful.It wasnât fun, but it would just happen to work out with this particular mare.And it was like, meaning that my, I was in the right position to be ready to change and to learn.And so, yeah, thatâs, Iâm a big believer in that.Thatâs like, you have to be ready for it and then that right horse will happen.And then itâs, yeah.
[SPEAKER 2]Yeah, absolutely.You spoke to a couple things that I definitely want to get into with the podcast, you know, relating to food, you know, and things like that, the food rewards.But letâs go to where you had listed at the beginning you know, all of the different experience that you had had working with horses prior.And my assumption is going to be that it was with negative reinforcement.And because that is how most of us, I want to say 99% of us get our start in the equestrian industry is we learn from negative reinforcement.Are you able to define the difference between negative reinforcement and positive reinforcement so that people can kind of understand the difference.And then if thereâs any misconceptions, you know, cause I know myself originally starting out purely with negative reinforcement, there was a lot of misconceptions that I had about positive reinforcement training before I truly got to know more about it.So can you just kind of define a little bit of that for everybody listening?
[SPEAKER 1]Yeah.So negative reinforcement you can think about all pressure and release type training where people talk about, you know, you, put a little pressure on and then the horse does behavior, you take away that pressure.That is negative reinforcement training.Negative reinforcement is just like the technical scientific terminology for that.The struggle with the terminology pressure and release is that we get hung up on that word pressure, but we can talk about that later.Positive reinforcement is when the behavior is motivated by the receiving of something thatâs appetitive.So with negative reinforcement, We have to remember that the word negative doesnât mean bad or wrong or unethical or anything.All it means from a scientific terminology perspective is the removal of something.And that reinforces the behavior that came before it.So when you, um, put a little pressure on the horse in the round pen, letâs say youâre kind of moving them with your body.And, or you could even say, you know, the whipper, it doesnât even have to be anything extensive, a little bit of movement of the rope, you put a little pressure on them.And then when they move forward, you withdraw that you like, take it back, you, you know, soften it. all of that, that is the relief of that mild aversive that says, yep, that was the right behavior.That was it.It reinforces that behavior.And pretty much all horse training up to very recently has been based off of this approach.With positive reinforcement, though, The behavior is motivated purely by getting access to an appetitive.So something pleasant, there canât be an aversive that comes before and then theyâre, theyâre responding to that.And then we just happened to add a cookie on top.Thatâs not how positive reinforcement works.They can be thinking, okay, based on my past history of interacting in this situation, Iâm going to try moving forward because usually I will get, you know, a clicking food or something.So, okay, Iâll give a better example of this.When Iâm training a horse to move forward, letâs say weâre going to go back to that kind of example of being in a round pen where you want the horse to move forward.With negative reinforcement, you would put that little pressure on.They, again, it could be super mild. And then they make some movements forward and then you release that, you take it back, you soften it.And that reinforces that behavior.So with positive reinforcement, what I would actually do though, is wait for the horse to kind of organically just want to move forward.And then I would take an opportunity to be like, yep, that got some, like some hay pellets, thatâs what I use usually.And then they go, oh, thatâs interesting.If I move this foot forward, hay pellet arrives.And then they start repeating that because they want access to that reinforcer, that appetitive, that pleasant thing. And then from there, we build that into something thatâs much bigger, like doing multiple rounds of the walk trotter canner around the round pen.But thereâs not something that theyâre trying to seek relief from.Thereâs something that they are trying to move forward to.Theyâre trying to seek out something and gain that.So yeah, thereâs a really big difference between the two as far as what is motivating the behavior for the horse. This is a really important thing to bring up is that the horse decides whatâs appetitive and whatâs aversive.The horseâs behavior shows us whether they were positively reinforced for something, negatively reinforced for something, or if something was punished even.We donât necessarily get to decide what is appetitive for a horse, what is positively reinforcing.You donât say you positively reinforce the horse, itâs you positively reinforce that behavior that the horse just did, or negatively reinforce that behavior that the horse just did.
[SPEAKER 2]um I could go on and on with examples but do you feel like that was yeah absolutely I liked how you like used a very concrete example of like the round pen so that it it gave that visual and Iâm wondering is there any behaviors or like things you notice in a horse you think I really think this horse could benefit from positive reinforcement training um like different things that they may do or ways that they react to things.And then also, are there any horses that you donât think are best suited to positive reinforcement?
[SPEAKER 1]Um, so with the first question, the horses that I feel would benefit the most from it.Well, first of all, Iâm going to say that I think all horses would benefit tremendously from, um, at least some use of positive reinforcement, but you could use all positive reinforcement for all horses if you wanted to. By definition, all forms of operant conditioning work.Positive reinforcement works for every horse.Negative reinforcement works for every horse.Positive punishment works for every horse.And negative punishment works for every single horse.There is no horse on this planet that doesnât respond to all four of those.Itâs the rules of learning for all animals, lizards, snakes, elephants, lions, tigers, people, horses.The horses that I am even more I would say like Iâm extra encouraging people to implement positive reinforcement with is when you get into situations where youâre going to ask them for a little bit of movement with some pressure or ask them to do something with some pressure.And youâre seeing clear signs of distress.Like they are not super happy about it.You might see a tail swish.You might see a kicking out.You might see some tension happen in the body.You might see triangulation of the eyes, things like that.Youâre seeing clear communication from the horse that theyâre finding this unpleasant. If your horse is responding, however, very calmly and just like, yep, this is cool.Youâre not seeing a lot of tension.Youâre not seeing a lot of reactivity.Then theyâre probably doing just fine with whatever youâre doing.So really looking to your horse and letting them tell you how theyâre feeling about the situation.On the flip side, we can also see this with positive reinforcement.Um, there is because itâs a growing. way of working with horses.Iâm going to jump in here real quick and say positive reinforcement, just like negative reinforcement is not a method by itself.There are a million different ways to apply varying amounts of positive reinforcement into your training methodology.And thereâs different techniques and you can have five trainers that predominantly use positive reinforcement in the same room, and weâre all going to do it a little bit differently.So Just like youâre going to get five natural horsemanship or negative reinforcement or competitive type trainers in the same room, and theyâre all going to do it differently.Um, so we just need to keep that in mind.Pressure and release is not a method.Positive reinforcement is not a method.Um, so.You can be adding clickers and adding food into the equation, all that, and be causing your horse quite a bit of stress. They can be tense, they can be tight, they can be triangulation of the eyes, tail swishing, kicking out, things like that, because thereâs a lot more going on in the picture than just, I added the click and the food.So that doesnât automatically make it a positive reinforcement situation, contingency.So with that being said, itâs not that there are horses that shouldnât have positive reinforcement or they donât do well with it, itâs that some situations especially some handlers need more coaching and there are better ways to apply it so maybe that particular way of applying positive reinforcement is not working for that particular horse and so we might need to look at a different variation of it or a different way of applying it or needing some more coaching or maybe we need to look at the rest of their life and it has nothing to do with the you know these 10 little minutes in this training session or 30 or whatever it has to do with the rest of their You know 23 plus hour day you know how much forage are they getting how much stress are they experiencing on a day to day basis, and I would look at all of these things for any horse, no matter how youâre training them.yeah so. Iâm not sure if that answered your question, hopefully.
[SPEAKER 2]Yeah, yeah, it did.And I guess a question that came from that is, what is your opinion on blending the two together?If you have a little bit of negative reinforcement and a little bit of positive reinforcement, is it totally blurry for the horse and makes things just unclear?Or do you think that that can be done?
[SPEAKER 1]Yeah, itâs such a great question. um, encourage people to separate them.So a lot of people that start working with me, what Iâll have them do is continue what theyâre normally doing.If theyâre taking riding lessons, um, or if theyâre just wanting to go out and trail rides, whatever it is, or even just basic handling, like being able to move the horse in and out of the stable, out to the pasture, like keep that how it is, as long as itâs not problematic, as long as your horse isnât dangerous or something like that. And theyâre not clearly in a lot of distress.Go ahead and keep that as it is.But then on the side, letâs learn about positive reinforcement.Letâs learn about shaping plans.Letâs learn about creating behaviors and stimulus control and all of the techniques and the behaviors and skills that we need to learn as handlers to train in this new way. And then as you want to go and start replacing some of the other behaviors.So like, letâs say going back to the example of being able to lead the horse from the stall to the pasture, letâs say itâs okay, but not great.The horse has a tendency to drag you to grass.It may be, it has a tendency to get a little frisky, might occasionally rear a little bit.And youâre like, Iâm not loving this situation, but Iâm keeping it like that for now.Um, then Iâll say, okay, once weâre ready, letâs go over here. to that leading behavior.And letâs replace this situation with positive reinforcement techniques.So weâll, you know, set the horse up to follow a target.Letâs say weâve taught them to follow a target.Now weâll bring it into this situation.Now, can you follow a target from your stall to your pasture?And, um, weâll have implemented leading behaviors with positive reinforcement, all of that.Thatâs just kind of one example.And thatâs how I teach people.And if they want to start eventually transitioning everything over, and so itâs almost all exclusively, you know, thatâs what weâre, the goal is, is positive reinforcement.Fantastic.If they only ever use it for like five or six behaviors, cool. I think it still adds a tremendous amount of benefit to their everyday life.It can improve their relationship with the horse.It gives the horse something to do that isnât riding based usually, like if youâre just dabbling a little bit.But as far as using them at the same time when people want to go about doing what theyâve always been doing and then just add the click and the food afterwards.I think thereâs a really high risk of creating a lot of conflict for the horse.I have seen it done well.I just donât teach it that way because there is such a risk. of creating a lot of conflict and confusion for the learner, for the horse.And oftentimes what Iâve seen is that the primary motivation for the behavior is still negative reinforcement.It just happens to be a little bit better because they get some food along in the process.I donât consider that a positive reinforcement trained behavior.I consider that a negative reinforcement trained behavior that maybe has some counter conditioning with adding the food in, maybe has added clarity and timing because of the click. But thatâs very different than the process I take with when Iâm trying to use exclusively positive reinforcement as the motivator for that behavior.Itâs just that process looks very different.
[SPEAKER 2]And now if somebody wanted to make the transition, letâs say that they previously were working with their horse from a negative reinforcement standpoint, and they wanted to start to transition into exclusively positive reinforcement. How would you recommend that they get started?Is there any certain equipment, aside from obviously the clicker and things like that, or basic exercises?How would you recommend they begin that transition?
[SPEAKER 1]Yeah, one of the best things that I would recommend is to find somebody to learn from.Thatâs something that I wish I had done right off the bat.I created a lot of problems with my horse.I made things way worse, as I explained earlier, in the beginning because I didnât have that guidance and I was trying to just do what I had done before by adding the click and the food afterwards.And it created a tremendous amount of problems. so much so that I ended up giving it up, saying it didnât work for horses, or at least it didnât work for my horse, and I kind of badmouthed it for a little while.Iâve seen that happen many times.And then when I came back, I still was⊠Itâs not like it is now, obviously.I have many years of experience now. but Iâm much like I was set up for success a whole lot more with that coaching and with a community too.So having a support system is really helpful because a lot of times weâre, you know, weâre at a boarding facility and weâre the only ones there that are doing clicker training and thereâs a lot of naysayers and a lot of negativity.And so when thatâs your environment that youâre set into and then you donât have your support system and you donât have coaching, itâs going to be really hard to be successful.Itâs not impossible, but itâs harder.Um, so that would be my recommendation part of them.And then as far as the actual training goes, a lot of people, um, get excited and theyâre like, yes, this is awesome.Itâs super powerful.Itâs fantastic.The horse is having fun.Weâre having fun.And they really want to jump into these big, exciting behaviors.Like, um, I, worked with somebody one time where the first behavior they taught their horse was Spanish walk.And the first behavior you teach your horse with clicker training will likely be the most well-remembered and well-versed because itâs the very first thing.Itâs the exciting one, and you guys practice it over and over again.And so it will keep coming back, and it will come back a lot.And youâre also probably going to make most mistakes with that behavior. Probably not putting it on cue very well.Itâs just going to be offered all the time.It becomes the new exciting shiny penny for the horse and for the handler.So my recommendation is to start with what I call a default neutral, but you could call it just about anything, a calm, attentive behavior, something like that.I asked them to stand with me. With a little bit of space between us you know a little bit of a personal bubble and I asked him to stand with me with their head neutral so lined up from nose to tail all four feet still not frozen not a robot they can still move if they need to get a fly thatâs fine theyâre just relaxed theyâre just standing with me I tell people to envision. what it would be like to hold your horse for the farrier or for the vets or even just like waiting in line to go into the show ring or something.You just want them to stand with you calmly.They donât have to be frozen robots.They just are like standing chill and reinforce that a lot, like all the time.And youâre going to do that in between practicing other behaviors.Youâre going to be doing that just pretty much anytime you can.Cause I want that behavior to be the most reinforced behavior.I want any time the horse goes, Oh shoot, I donât know what to do to default back to a neutral position.So thatâs where I would start with any horse.Thatâs where I start with every horse too.Um, and that way itâs the most.Like practice the most reinforced behavior.And so theyâre most likely to default back to that one because if for no other reason, itâs a really important for safety purposes.Mm.
[SPEAKER 2]Yes, absolutely.And now, riding.So if somebody wanted to get started with positive reinforcement, and they still wanted to ride at the same time, or they still had competition plans, how would they go about that?Can you do positive reinforcement and ride at the same time?Can you compete at the same time?Can you make that transition and still do it?Do you have to have a break?Iâd love to discuss that. Because I know itâs going to be a big thing.
[SPEAKER 1]Yeah.You know, just like referencing earlier when I mentioned how I like to encourage people to start exploring positive reinforcement. I encourage people to keep doing, you know, the riding, keep going towards their competition goals, doing all the things that you want to do.And then letâs, you know, play with positive reinforcement on the side.Letâs learn some new novel behaviors on the side.Letâs learn, um, letâs problem solve a particularly, you know, like maybe you only ever use positive reinforcement to teach your horse out how to lead out to the pasture, but then, or lead to the arena and then you go and ride.Thatâs fine too. Although I would encourage people to look at maybe the motivation behind why their horse is struggling to be led into the arena or out to the pasture.That could tell you a lot about how they feel about that situation.But I donât have any problem with people wanting to use it under certain contingencies, but not others.With positive reinforcement though, once you get to that point, if youâre kind of going all in and you want to do this and kind of replace everything else, You can absolutely ride and you can absolutely do different high level type behaviors.I know trainers that are doing fantastic training with higher level dressage movements.Um, I know people that are jumping that with horses that have been trained almost exclusively with positive reinforcement.The competition environment is hard because the rules and the environment and how the competitions are set up basically are not conducive to I would argue not even just positive reinforcement, but just horses in general.I think that they are set up with lacking consideration for the horses needs at an ethical level, at a, you know, species appropriate level.So Iâm, Iâm not anti competitions.Iâm just saying theyâre a hard, itâs a hard environment.Itâs a hard situation to put a horse into period.Um, But even if your horse can and is prepared for a competition type environment and handles it very well and isnât super stressed and all that, again, the rules are not set up to allow for a lot of positive reinforcement.They are specifically set up to allow for tremendous amounts of negative reinforcement and even positive punishment.We see it a lot in the competition arena. But if you were to try and scratch your horse or click and give us some food and then go back into your test, youâd be excused.Itâs just not going to work.Even some of the Liberty competitions, Iâm not seeing a lot of accommodations being made for a different kind of reinforcement being used.Meanwhile, itâs almost continuous use of negative reinforcement in the same test, in the same pattern, whatever. your horse isnât supposed to receive any reinforcement during the competition.Itâs that itâs only supposed to be a certain kind.And so absolutely, you can ride.I take my horses on very long trail rides.I do dressage with them.Western dressage, classical dressage.I jump with them.Iâve helped quite a few people work with horses that were doing competitive hunter jumper or other disciplines to problem solve some areas. And, um, I know some people that are competing, itâs just more challenging if youâre going to try and make that full switch over.Um, my recommendation is to keep doing your riding stuff, keep doing your competitions as you are now start dabbling with positive reinforcement, let it grow, see how much you want to use it, how much you want to incorporate it, and then see if your goals kind of start to change.Or maybe you could at some point do that.Um, like weâve talked about earlier where itâs. really a combination of negative reinforcement, positive reinforcement, but you start incorporating, you know, more food rewards into your regular riding, um, and seeing if your horse likes that and if itâs okay, and if itâs effective for you guys and itâs working and itâs making things better and your horse seems happy, then go for it.I think thatâs great.So every horse human team, I think is a little bit of an individual here.
[SPEAKER 2]Iâm going to play devilâs advocate for a second and, um, put myself in the shoes of one of your students.So letâs say I am making the transition to positive reinforcement and I call you up and Iâm like, Adele, I am trying to lead my horse and heâs not moving or I get on their back and theyâre not taking a step forward or, um, I canât get them to come away from their buddies in the field.
[SPEAKER 1]What do I do?Well, all three of those are very different.I always, because I base my training and just how I work with horses on the human hierarchy and Lima, my first question is always, okay, letâs look at the environment.Letâs look at how this was set up.Is there something happening thatâs causing the horse to not want to go into the arena or I canât remember some of the others where you asked, but, um, letâs look at that.Letâs see whatâs happening.Is it because their buddy is back in the barn and you want to take them out to the pasture and theyâre having to leave their buddy behind?Well, thatâs an easy fix.We just take the buddy out with them.Um, or we go and we do specific training that helps teach, you know, condition them that being away from their buddy is awesome.And then they get to go back.And so thereâs specific training protocols that we can use for that. So weâre always going to look at environment first.Weâre going to look at how the horse is feeling.Are they, you know, is there a medical concern here?Is something wrong?Is the horse maybe not wanting to lead out to the pasture because the pathway is rocky and their feet hurt when you walk over the rocks?None of this has to do with positive reinforcement.All of this has to do with learning how horses communicate and learning to be good caregivers and being just like educated and proactive trainers and caregivers.We can always do things to step in before we look at it as a training protocol.Very few things actually, very few problem behaviors are truly like training alone.Itâs almost always connected with some sort of pain or some sort of environment management.Thereâs always something else related there. But letâs play.So letâs pretend that, you know, we make sure the buddy goes out, weâve checked the feet, weâve done all this stuff.And while we canât truly say this horse is, you know, a hundred percent comfortable because we canât ask them, weâre going to assume, you know, at this point weâre like, okay, weâve exhausted a lot of options and itâs training.Letâs look at training now.I tend to do them kind of both at the same time.I let them overlap. I am going to teach that horse how to touch a target and then start to follow it probably and then start teaching them to go for longer and longer periods following this target.And then I can even transition, I can fade out the target so they donât need to use that at all.And for anybody whoâs listening, a target is like, it really doesnât matter what it is, but oftentimes what youâll see is like a stick with like a ball on the end. I teach them to follow it they are targeting it they are moving with it.I can fade out that target so theyâre leading as if thereâs no target there and I can even transfer this to barn staff, make it really easy for them, you know they we put this all on a big chain so the horse learns like. Okay, the person comes into my stall, they put the halter on, they put the lead rope on, then they lead me out to the pasture.When I get there, they turn me around, they shut the gate, they take off my halter.And then I can, you know, talk to the barn management, I can say, you know, here, just give them a little handful of these pellets that Iâm going to sit here by this pasture is at the very end or something like that.So the reinforcement, the positive reinforcement is only happening at the very end of this big sequence of behaviors that theyâve learned in stages beforehand with me or their owner, whoever. And Iâve done this for quite a few, um, cases.Actually, I had one case where it was a little mini pony and he was biting people continuously when they tried to lead him.And so, and she was at a boarding facility and other people who didnât have positive reinforcement handling training.Couldnât they, she, it just wasnât going to be practical.They, the horse needed to learn how to put a halter on and lead out to the pasture and then just be put out there and no clicking and treating in between. And so thatâs what we did.That whole protocol I just mentioned to you, thatâs what we did.And he leads beautifully now.He hasnât, as far as I know, he hasnât bitten in years.And he is wonderful going in and out of the pasture now.We havenât had any problems. Um, so yeah, thatâs, I would take a training, training protocol like that.And I would reduce the frequency of reinforcement that was needed to be practical for that individual situation and still making sure that itâs positively reinforcing for the horse.So it takes time and takes practice, just like with, you know, traditional negative reinforcement type training. you donât get on a green for a course and assume that theyâre going to be able to go for long periods without releases.Same things happening here.So it just takes some strategy and skill and learning from for the human.
<p>[SPEAKER 2]I love that answer.And I love how you opened it with letâs look at everything rather than just the training, because I feel like thatâs something that so many people bypass or overlook.And itâs it can be speaking from personal experience, incredibly exhausting when you overlook those things because no matter what you do, itâs never going to resolve if you donât go and find the original issue.Um, so 100%, I love that you opened with that because itâs, you know, in my opinion, the most important thing of all is, is making sure that itâs not something in the horseâs environment that is causing it to, um, for you to think that itâs a training issue?</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]Yeah, I tell people quite often, I canât train away pain.I canât train away poor management, poor, you know, their needs not being met.It is not about positive reinforcement.Itâs about just training, period.Like, you canât train these things away.You could temporarily suppress the symptoms, the behavior symptoms, but you canât make them go away by training if thereâs an underlying cause for the behavior that has not been resolved. Yeah, all behavior has a function, all behavior has purpose.And itâs our jobs.This is why I donât go by just horse trainer title, like Iâm a certified behavior consultant.So my job is not just about training, actually, most of it is not training.Most of it when I do a behavior consult is like, puzzle, you know, solving, like problem solving.Iâm like a detective, I come in for a horse that is attacking people.And Iâve had that happen recently.And turns out itâs Vision problems and painful feet.And, um, yes, we did some training cause we needed to counter condition, you know, people being around and learning that theyâre safe and sheâs not going to be harmed.Um, but the biggest thing was getting her feet comfortable and helping her with her vision, which for her, it was like sun blindness.So like in the brightness, she couldnât see.And, um, so just putting on a really intense UV mask. a fly mask helped tremendously.So she could actually keep her eyes open so she could see people.So she wasnât so scared all the time.Um, but yeah, and thatâs big part of what I do is not just not training is problem solving for the horse.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]Yeah.Yeah.I love that.What type of food rewards do you recommend?Um, so for example, my horses have access to 24 seven forage.They have, you know, a great big hay box.Itâs always full.</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]And, um,</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]What would you recommend for somebody like me to feed them?Would it be⊠So Iâm just going to list off some of the obvious things.Thereâs the option of treats, which can get really sugary really quickly.You mentioned hay pellets or the different forage pellets.I know some people that use some handfuls of hay or grass and things like that, which In my personal opinion, if the horses have access to hay 24-7, would that be as enticing?So what is your overall opinion on the different types of food rewards that people can use?</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]I love this conversation.We could probably do a whole podcast episode on just this alone.I think people far underestimate the importance of selecting the type of reinforcer and how youâre using the reinforcers and how the environment, the antecedents, and what youâre training can also modify the needed reinforcer and the individualâs preferences for certain reinforcers.Training timelines, goals, things like that all play a part.So I use a lot of variations of one primary type of reinforcer, which is forage-based.I almost never use a reinforcer that has added flavor, added sugar, added molasses ingredients, grains, oats, anything like that. almost always itâs some form of Timothy, you know, maybe like a coastal Bermuda, like if itâs loose, or alfalfa, or I know, in some areas, like, thereâs different kinds of hay you might use, but I try and get as close to what they already have 24 seven access of.And for a couple of reasons.First, we need to talk about the idea of contra free loading, which is donât exactly quote me on this, but contra-freeloading is when the, you can have two equal value reinforcers as far as like the actual object itself.So like loose hay in the pasture and loose hay in your hand, whatever for the training. But because doing something to access the reinforcer is valuable to the learner, it actually ups the value of whatâs available for training.So I can train with loose hay thatâs in my pouch, and they can have loose hay at their feet, and itâs the same training session, and they will opt for what Iâm offering them because it makes it more valuable just by wanting to do something to get it.So that active effort increases the value of it Also, the form at which itâs being fed increases value or decreases the value.So Iâll notice that when I feed hay pellets by hand versus when I put them into a food pan versus scattering them on the ground.The one thatâs the highest value is going to be from my hand because most horses have experience of like, oh, by hand means itâs novel and itâs a treat.So that increases the value of the reinforcer.From a food pan is usually associated with getting meals.Some horses, It can increase the value of the reinforcer, but for a lot of times I find this is like a middle ground versus if you scatter it on the ground, they have to like kind of look around for it.And itâs just kind of like grazing and they do this all the time.And itâs just not as exciting.Itâs not as reinforcing. So how youâre delivering it impacts the value of the reinforcer.And Iâm not going to go too much deeper on this because, again, I could do a whole episode on this.But most of the time, to simplify, Iâm using just a basic hay pellet or like a really broken up hay cube. Um, even most of the time itâs Timothy, I find thatâs even lower value reinforcer than alfalfa for most horses.And for some horses Iâm going with loose hay.I just have a big pouch, big, you know, like big bag and itâs a little bit cumbersome, but it works for certain horses until I can get them to the point where theyâre okay with pellets.Theyâre not too excited by them.Um, or itâs a safety thing too, if theyâre not chewing them properly. things like that.So Iâll use just like a loose hay in my pouch and Iâm feeding that and they have loose hay available.And thatâs something that Iâm very careful with.Whenever Iâm training, thereâs always an alternative reinforcer available.So I donât have the only hay thatâs available.This helps reduce the potential that theyâre only doing what I ask for the food.So this is really important.And this is also why I use very low value reinforcers, because I want them to be very quick to be like, yeah, I donât feel like doing that.And the hay pellet is not so exciting that itâs going to kind of quote, force them to do the thing just to get the treat.So if you start using like really molasses-y things, horses will do just about anything to get a molasses, like a Mrs. Pastures kind of cookie.Iâm only bringing those out if like itâs the middle of the night, weâre in a lightning storm, and the horse is colicking, or theyâve got to get in the trailer, and they hate the trailer.Iâm bringing out Mrs. Pastures because we got to get them in. But even then, honestly, if you do the training right and you build the trust history, you build the reinforcement history and youâve prepared them and youâve adequately introduced different distractions and difficulty levels and all that so that when you are loading a horse in the middle of the night during a lightning storm, which would be terrible, but letâs say it happens, your horse should walk right in because theyâve been prepared for this.So I donât always have to bring those out.Thatâs just like an emergency. really got to make this happen.Iâm kind of intentionally, you know, coaxing them into doing something that theyâre not comfortable with.But I donât want that to be my everyday training.My everyday training needs to be, you know, weâre on the same page, itâs very cooperative, theyâre very willing to communicate to me that theyâre not comfortable with this, they donât want to do this, I donât want them to feel pressured into doing anything at all.Thatâs really important.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]And then just to reiterate, you recommend keeping it within the same forage family.So for example, if they eat Timothy hay, you go with Timothy like pellets or other like loose Timothy hay, not for example, alfalfa.</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]Yes, itâs possible.Like for me, really in my area, mostly what we have available is coastal Bermuda and they donât really pellet that.Iâve at least not ever seen it.And so I end up using a lot of Timothy. because I donât, I canât get coastal Bermuda in pellets.But if I bring out alfalfa pellets, which they donât often get, they get a little bit of alfalfa every once in a while, but itâs still higher value because itâs alfalfa, itâs a novel taste, itâs fun.And we have to remember horses arenât like, they taste a lot of different flavors.Iâm not saying they donât taste things, but what their preferences are obviously is towards grass and hay and stuff.So weâre sitting here thinking like, oh, itâs just grass.Like thatâs not exciting at all.But to them, alfalfa is super exciting.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]Yeah, absolutely.And now, there was another question that had come up.It was the food one and, oh, clicker.So what is the opinion on specifically using a clicker versus having like a specific word or you make a sound with your mouth that is specifically, you know, for those same reasons that you would use a clicker?Whatâs kind of like that?</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]I prefer to teach people with a mechanical clicker.So like the little things you buy at the store and I have one specific type that I use.I just have tons of them.I have like, theyâre just coming out of ears and pockets here.Like Iâve got them in my car.Iâve got them in my purse.Iâve got them everywhere.Um, the reason being is because they are super easy to transfer between handlers. And they sound the same every single time.Theyâre very precise and theyâre fast.And itâs a very distinct sound too.The problem with words is that oftentimes the words are choice.The word choice that we use, like the thing that we use like good or yes, or good boy or good girl or whatever it is, itâs too long.It doesnât stand out amongst us talking.Like imagine youâre on a trail ride and youâre just chatting with your friend and youâre like, good boy.Like it doesnât have a distinct, you know, sound that comes out, unless youâre very specific about it.Um, like for me, I have a bridge signal or basically the clicker, but itâs a word.And I say, yes, but I donât, I donât talk like that, but itâs very sharp.Itâs very short.And I make, and I say it much louder than that.Like itâs a high pitch, like, and it stands out amongst the rest of my conversation.Cause Iâll be teaching.And if I use, if I just were like teaching and talking along, like Iâm doing now.And I said, yeah, so whatever, like the horse isnât male to pick up on that.Um, The other problem Iâve run into with words as bridge signals is theyâre really hard to transfer to other handlers.I have students and interns and stuff that come from all over the world.And so, you know, as much as I want to, like, I donât, to me, I donât have an accent, but clearly I do.And, you know, if you were to come and visit and say the same words as me, you may not even be able to pick up on, like our voices just sound different.And even if we donât have an accent, just the difference between the the volume at which we speak and the tonality of it all changes.So if youâre going to have your horse work with multiple different people, they need to have something that is easy to transfer.You donât have to stick with exclusively a mechanical clicker.So like I mentioned before, my horses all have a mechanical clicker bridge signal, but I also have words that I have trained that are specifically for me. that they understand what it means.But I donât usually have my students use those words because theyâre hard to transfer.So you can have more than one bridge signal.But I think for clarity and precision and consistency and ease of understanding for the horse, especially at the beginning, and this is what I tell people, just humor me, give me like three to six months with a clicker, mechanical clicker.And then if you want to change it to a word after that, have right at it.I donât really care.Like you go do you and have fun.And if itâs working for you and your horse, perfect, amazing.But in the beginning, letâs start with a mechanical clicker.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]So learning new things is always like exciting, and it can seem, you know, fun.And I donât think a lot of people or enough people talk about how overwhelming learning new things can be and how to overcome the roadblocks that inevitably come up when youâre learning new things.So what advice would you give people that are making the transition to positive reinforcement or starting it for the first time and are feeling overwhelmed and maybe just want to go back to that comfort zone of what theyâve always done before?What advice would you give?</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]Yeah, so this also this component, this piece of it also plays into my recommendations for people to start small, and let it build as youâre ready for it.If youâre anything like me, you want to go all in and just be like, yes, this is my new thing, you want to hyper focus on it, you want it to, you know, transform your world and you just just dive way in headfirst. And I think a lot of people are this way.And I feel like sometimes Iâm like up there, like Iâm like, you know, back here, like almost as if weâre like a rider, like trying to hold back the rains, like settle down.Like we got this, weâll do it slowly.So thatâs one of my biggest recommendations though, is slowing down and letting it happen piece by piece.Just start with one thing where you can be successful. Get some clarity around it, practice, you know, with positive reinforcement.Iâm specifically thinking of like training a new behavior.Like letâs just start with one, maybe two.And donât worry about the rest of everything youâre doing with your horse.Just leave that as it is.Let it be comfortable.Let it be known.Reinforced behavior is not only for you, but for the horse.Cause itâs something we donât think about as weâre learners too. which is a really good point that you brought up.If I were to take a horse and just dump them into the deep end somewhere and say, you must do this right now, like thatâs flooding, right?And so we tend to flood ourselves.Thatâs a good point.Or let our environment and people around us flood us with information.And so we have to be careful not to do that.We have to be careful to let this kind of drip feed it to yourself.Let it be gradual.Let yourself do it one thing at a time. It doesnât even have to be about training.I know for myself, part of this whole transition, it wasnât just about positive reinforcement, but going back to when I said, like, first, I look at the environment and howâs the horse feeling and all that, all of that had to happen to like, Iâve had to learn a lot about hoof care and you know, even learn how to trim horses feet myself.Iâve had to learn about dental care, like a lot about dental care for horses, people know very little about dental care, and just kind of trust whoever to do their teeth.And itâs amazingly, thatâs amazingly problematic, actually, and causes a lot of behavior issues that we donât even realize.Bodywork, Iâm right now kind of deep diving into bodywork.But Iâve wanted to know all of these things for a very long time now, like letâs like rewind like 10, 12 years.Iâm like, okay, tomorrow Iâm going to know about body work, dental care, health care, you know, training, all this.And I had to stop myself and be like, okay, letâs start with one.Whatâs priority right now?And I decided it was at that time I was learning about positive reinforcement.And then I just kind of gradually worked my way in, started working with the coach, you know, letting it kind of take over everything I was doing, but it took a while to get there.It wasnât like overnight. And then when I felt like I had a good handle on that, I was like, okay, Iâm ready to take on studying about hoof care and transitioning my horses to barefoot and all that.So I was doing it in stages.And then after a while I was like, okay, Iâve got some bandwidth again.I feel pretty confident letting that information kind of move to the background.And now I can start studying equine dental work and you know, all that. So taking this approach with anything that youâre doing with horses, whether itâs about training or, you know, holistic care or just better horse keeping, like their environment, all of that, how youâre feeding them.I mean, just forage based nutrition and all of that, thatâs a whole overwhelming product or topic in itself.So, yeah, basically my recommendation is to try and just take off one bite at a time. time, let yourself learn about it, let it become something that youâre really comfortable with, and then make the conscious decision to go to that next step.You can make a list if you want of things you want to learn about.Thatâs great to just try not to let that list overwhelm yourself, overwhelm you.And then the other thing I would say is, I still think working with a coach is going to help you a lot because your coach is going to be able to come in and say, I know you just watched all these videos on social media and you just read five books and you know, youâre doing all this stuff, but what you and your horse need right now today, that is the most important thing is this right here.So they can really funnel all of this overwhelming amount of information into what is most important for you to at this moment.And then you can always go back to the other stuff later.Um, but I find that that really helps my students who are like, I just didnât even know where to begin.I didnât know what was most important.Itâs so overwhelming.Do I teach this first?Do I teach that first?Am I doing it wrong?And I can come in and just be like, totally, I see all of that.Letâs start here, just one step at a time.And then we call that thin slicing our criteria.So we have the criteria of learning, letâs say, about positive reinforcement.Well, thatâs like a huge goal, right? Letâs break it all the way down to the very first piece of information that you need to know.Here it is for you.And thatâs what we would do for our horses, too.You break down these big goals, these big training behaviors, big goals like you want to go to a competition.OK, that is a huge goal to then youâve got a thin slice and thin slice and thin slice that down.If youâre talking about a full maybe that youâre going to raise, what do they need to learn first?That can be really overwhelming to think about.Like, where do you even start?And so a coach can help you do that.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]Mmm, I love that.I love what you said at the beginning like donât flood yourself like itâs itâs such good advice Talking about social media you had kind of mentioned, you know if you saw these videos and you wanted to learn it and social media can be a great place to build connection and to learn new things and to be inspired and it can also be a a not so great place, you know, with opinions and all of those things.Are there any stereotypes or things that you maybe had to overcome when making the transition to positive reinforcement?And the reason why I ask is because I do feel and Iâm hoping that thereâs so many things that I hope for change within the equestrian industry. And one of them is the lack of, we diminish the amount of division that is between disciplines and industries and training, such as positive reinforcement and negative reinforcement.So have you felt any stereotypes when making the transition and how did you overcome that?</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]Oh boy.Um, so keeping in mind that when I started introducing clicker training to my horses and myself and positive reinforcement and started learning about this, there were maybe like two accounts on Instagram that even dabbled with it.Um, it wasnât talked about, it wasnât thing.There was only two books about it and they were older books.Um, there was no courses, there was no clinics, there were no, It just wasnât, it wasnât really a thing.So I was definitely going against the grain.Now, not as much as like a couple of the people that came before me, of course, but still, yes, the amount of stereotypes, the amount of judgment, like every day, every day, just sometimes as many as like hundreds of comments of like, Youâre never supposed to feed the horse by hand.You know, this is dumb, this is stupid, just all of the word choices that people could use.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]And that can be, especially when, I know you had mentioned that previously too, about you thinking, oh, Iâve been taught Iâm not supposed to feed the horse by hand.And so then when people are coming and saying that, it makes you start to question, you know, what youâre doing and all of those things.And it really can create a negative spiral for a lot of people.</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]Yes, it created a daily existential crisis.I think, honestly, how did I get through this?Because itâs not nearly like it is now.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]Or just what advice would you give to somebody who maybe is struggling to show up authentically with their horse?</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]Yeah. I will say Iâll be up front I had my own fists like I boarded at my own, you know, not boarded I kept my horses at my own place.And so I didnât receive much judgment unless the vet was there and they often are not big supporters of training this way, which is sad and unfortunate. Um, especially since now, considering all the vets that work with my horses, like these are the best horses we work with, like hands down, but then they still, I know they think Iâm crazy on the side and Iâve heard them say things too.And Iâm like, I, it doesnât make a whole lot of sense to me.Iâm crazy, but also my horses are the best horses youâve ever worked with.So somethingâs not adding up here.Um, anyway, uh, so that really helps that I had like my sanctuary, my place where I went back to where there was no judgment. A lot of people thatâll be boarding at facilities and such, I, my heart goes out to you guys because it is much harder when youâre daily being observed and criticized.And, um, but thankfully itâs growing and thankfully people are becoming more aware and itâs not such as a weird, um, concept anymore, at least not in many areas.Um, but as far as like social media goes and my experience there, even my experience working with other professionals, like. body workers or vets that would come in and be judgmental of what I was doing. feel like Iâve driven, Iâve said this a few times, but Iâm going to keep driving at home community is really important.Having your support system that you can go back to after a bad, bad visit where the vet was just going on and on about how bad clicker training was.And then you can go back to them and be like, this is what happened today.And they can come around and support and they can encourage you and they can be like, itâs okay that they thought that way, because you know, you know, this, this and this and this and you can go back and look at like, where things started and where they are now, and people to remind you of why youâre doing what youâre doing, that support system to keep you on your path.And if youâre out there doing it alone, itâs just so hard.And you donât have to pay for a community.Thereâs a lot of like, I know some different Discord channels.I know some Facebook groups.Facebook groups are, be careful with those.Thatâs my warning. But thereâs different programs to like mine that have a big community that comes with it.Thereâs also you can get into talking with other creators on Instagram.Thatâs how I started.That was my community is, um, I started reaching out to other people that were doing clicker training and we would chat back and forth and we created like message.We would moved over to like whatâs happened stuff and we would just talk like all day.And that was basically my, my barn friends were on WhatsApp and we would send each other videos all the time and help each other out.And it was so, so helpful because I felt like I had my community, my, my support system.So even if I was having these other experiences, they were not the they were kind of the exception to the rule of, you know, the support that I was receiving.They werenât the majority.And it wasnât all the naysayers as the majority, the majority was my support system, those people that I trusted.And the other thing that I would encourage is just Well, documenting, having videos and such can be really helpful to go back and remind yourself of where you came from and why youâre doing what youâre doing, because that can be easy to forget.And just keeping some sort of log of, you know, because thereâs been so many times where Iâm like, man, are we making progress, whatever.And then I go back and read training records or watch videos.And Iâm like, oh, yeah, weâve come a long way, a long way. And I think the third thing would be that Itâs really easy when you discover something new thatâs exciting and changing your world to go and really start to preach it to everybody else.And I started off here too, where you just get on social media and you just start kind of shouting it from the hilltops and start yelling at other people, like, why arenât you getting it?Be careful doing that because it creates a lot of hostility.It invites people onto your pages or whatever to judge you, which is going to have its effect.It also creates that division that you were talking about, just, weâre just throwing insults at each other back and forth.And, you know, we have our two different camps and weâre like, youâre bad.No, youâre bad.And it just creates more division, more problems.And I think you really, in a sense, like the way you interact with the people around you, the energy you give out is what you receive.And so if you want that support system, if you want people to reinforce your efforts and be there to encourage you and to also be respectful in responses to you when they donât agree with you, I think you have to really give that out too.So yeah, I think that if I were going to say one more thing, it would be that As always, the primary focus should be your horse, you and your horse.You are a team.Itâs you guys against the world, essentially.And so try not to make decisions just because you feel peer pressured into them or that somebody else has an opinion or theyâre, you know, whatever it is that theyâre saying or doing.Try and really focus on what you feel like your horse needs and what you need.And if itâs working for you and you guys feel like youâre in a better place than youâve ever been, and itâs going, then thatâs all thatâs important.Thatâs, thatâs really the. Thatâs it.That tells you everything you need to know, regardless of what anybody else says.So just try and stay really focused on you guys as a team.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]So good.I want to like underline and star and highlight like every single thing that you said there, like all of your points.Very, very good.I loved it. Overall, what is your hope for the future of the equestrian industry?And I know that weâve talked a little bit about that, but is there anything, you know, that you really hope that you see in terms of a change?</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]Oh, thatâs such a big question.And itâs so hard to answer just with one.But I think if I were to pick one, is that we would start refocusing on the horse and not what they can give us and not what they can do for us, but how we can be a team, how we can give back to them, how we can listen to them and respect them.Weâre so focused on them respecting us.Thereâs one other conversation.Weâre so focused on them doing what we want, them being obedient, them winning us ribbons, them doing their job, them, you know, living up to their bloodlines, you know, just everything that they can do for us.And we get really focused on that.And I know people will say, well, I, you know, heâs a comfy stable and heâs fed like a king and queen.And my argument to that is that thatâs not what a horse interprets as living as a king or queen.Like we need to actually step back and look at our horses and ask them, Not literally but well kind of like who are you what do you need as an individual and as a species and we need to get back to the real basics of.Horses are you know theyâre foragers they need forage 24 7 like they need access to it they need space to move they need. to be provided the basics that even animals that live in zoos and are provided, but weâd fail to provide our horses.Meanwhile, stating that theyâre being kept in, you know, race like kings and queens.And weâre like, theyâre not even being provided their basic needs that they need as a species. So I would like to see the horse industry as a whole really step back and evaluate what it is weâre doing to horses, what can we do to help them thrive in their domestic environment better, and can we change some major, very common practices that were designed for our convenience and because we thought it sounded good. to better meet their needs.Like, letâs go actually meet the actual horse that we have and love horses for being horses, not for what they can give us.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]So good.Adele, we have four questions that we ask every podcast guest.Theyâre just like a quick rapid fire question.And the first one is, do you have a motto or a favorite saying?</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]Yes, and I have like five. And Iâm always, this is whatâs really funny about me is like, I have all these sayings or quotes Iâve picked up from professionals that I highly respect, but I often butcher them when I say them.Theyâre in there, I know they are.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]Itâs like itâs in my heart, it just doesnât come out well.</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]Yes, I get it.So one of my favorites is effectiveness is not enough.And that Iâm quoting Dr. Susan Friedman.I love that. just basically live by that.Just because somethingâs working or getting the result, which is a subjective result that we deem as effective, isnât enough.Itâs not enough to base our decisions off of, we need to make sure that, you know, the horse is happy and healthy and is consenting and just like all of these other things that go with it.So itâs not just about effectiveness.Thereâs a lot more to the story.I think that would be the primary one.So Iâll go with that one.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]Yeah, that was, thatâs a good one.Thatâs a good one to have. The second question is, who has been the most influential person in your equestrian journey?</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]Oh, man. So some of the most effective, or sorry, some of the most influential people in my questioning journey have actually not been equestrians.Theyâve been, usually they are either a dog trainer or they work with exotics.Thereâs a couple of big, you know, more well-recognized trainers that I could mention, you know, like really enjoy learning from Hannah Branigan, Ken Ramirez, Peggy Hoganâs another great one.And thereâs quite a few more.I didnât even scratch the surface.But honestly, I have to say my husband, heâs not a horse person.Heâs not a, maybe not influential is the wrong word, but heâs been, like so supportive and really encouraging me and pushing not pushing me forward but like just just really supportive in this equestrian journey is itâs not always rainbows and butterflies right itâs ups and downs especially as youâre going pro and youâre fighting not getting burned out and youâre youâre fighting um you know just just wanting to spend every minute at the barn rather than, you know, doing finances or something and being successful in business too.Heâs been really influential in helping me push my career forward and growing as a horse professional.And so I would say just kind of on the other, like heâs been really influential in the business side and just helping support me.And then the trainers that I mentioned, as far as like improving my equestrian journey from a training perspective, a ethics perspective.Oh, Susan Friedman, of course, would be another really big one.So yeah, I feel like I have like two different primary influences there, two different categories.Yeah.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]No, thatâs, I mean, at the end of the day, like itâs your answer, right?So itâs, it doesnât have to fit exactly with our mold.The third one is if you could give equestrians one piece of advice, what would it be?</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]Um, I think it would be kind of going back to the, you know, that the hope for the future of the equestrian industry is kind of connected to that is I would love to see and encourage my encouragement to equestrians would be my advice to them would be to really step back and with open, honest, openly and honestly, and with curiosity, learn about horses again without all of the stereotypes, without all of the just real salesy types of training things, without all of the conditioning that most of us have growing up in the horse world.I mean, just even going back to like, you should never hand feed a horse.Like that was drilled into me and conditioned into me.So going back, and thatâs just one of many, Going back to the beginning, you know, kind of almost like youâre a kid again and youâre excited, youâre going to have your first pony and you want to learn everything there is to know about horses.But like with what we know now, I think that would be my biggest piece of advice is to kind of start fresh as much as you can.You canât completely, Iâm not saying to ditch everything you knew before, because a lot of what I learned before has served me now. but I think itâs really valuable to go through this exercise of like, okay, forget what everything Iâve been told, forget everything Iâve learned.Letâs go in like objectively and with curiosity, start back at the beginning and like, letâs learn about horses again with what we know now.And I think thatâll provide a lot of clarity, a lot of confidence in your decisions.Um, and it will bring a tremendous amount of value and transformation in your relationship with your horse, because youâre going to start to actually, understand your horse at a deeper level and know them at a deeper level and be able to be more effective with your training, more effective with your management.Youâre going to see a lot of problems kind of miraculously resolve themselves when we go and treat horses as horses and see them for who they are.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]Thereâs a, um, a phrase that I learned and it wasnât related to anything to do with horses.Um, but itâs to have a beginnerâs mind. And I think that applies so much, you know, it can go to horses, it can go to business, it can go to literally anything in your life is to go back to having like when you think that you have a good grasp or when things arenât working or, you know, whatever it may be.If you go back to having a beginnerâs mind, then sometimes you can fill in those gaps that maybe you missed the first time around.So I think thatâs a, thatâs really good advice. The first one or the fourth one is please complete this sentence.For me, horses are.</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]What are horses not?Horses are.Tremendous teachers and. just really important and tremendous teachers that are there and ready for us to learn and for us to be open and humble and not even so much just about horses. I canât tell you how much my horses have taught me about myself and about my kids and about peopleâs behavior.And I think they are just such important teachers in our lives if we allow them to be.And thatâs really the critical thing is we have to have that beginnerâs mind.We have to step back and really see the horses for who they are and allow them to I donât know that theyâre directly saying, okay, Iâm going to teach this person, but just to be a source that we, you know, somebody that can, or a being that can be there to help us through our learning journey.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]Yeah.Horses teach us more about being a human than most humans can teach us.Awesome.Where can people find you and how can they connect with you?And please, Feel free to plug your, I know that you have some online coaching and mentorship and programs and thatâs a, let everybody know where they can follow you, how they can connect with you, how they can learn from you, all of the things.</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]Yeah, um, my website is going to be the best place to start.Itâs the willing equine, uh, or sorry, he willing equine.com.And youâre going to find everything from there, including my other social media, all my social media stuff, my podcast, um, everything from there. Also, my courses are on there.I will say I am in the process of, probably when this episode is released, Iâm just about to release a new series of courses and kind of revamp my program just a little bit.So if you get onto my website and itâs not up yet, just give me a couple of weeks and it will be ready to go.But yes, I do have my academy, which has a bunch of courses inside of it with a supportive community that you can join. And I also teach clinics and things.But you can find all that on my website and then also eventually the updated website.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]Awesome.And weâll link that.And then weâll also link your Instagram and your Facebook for people to follow you.</p><p>[SPEAKER 1]OK, perfect.</p><p>[SPEAKER 2]Thank you so much, Adele, for joining us, for giving us all the information.Iâm taking a lot away from this, and I think that our audience will, too.Thereâs been so many questions answered.And if anybody feels that little pull towards learning more, then, of course, check out our show notes for all of Adeleâs links.Thank you for listening to this episode of the Equestrian Connection podcast by WeHorse. If you enjoyed this episode, it would mean the world to us if you could leave us a rating and review as well as share us on social media.You can find us on Instagram at WeHorse underscore USA and check out our free seven day trial on WeHorse.com where you can access over 175 courses with top trainers from around the world in a variety of topics and disciplines.Until next time, be kind to yourself, your horses and others.</p>