One of the biggest misconceptions in the horse industry is that a “broke” horse for someone else will automatically be safe and reliable for the next person. That is true to some degree, although learning to maintain a well trained horse’s respect is the real key. The bottom line is, respect isn’t transferable with horses. Which is why a horse will perform well for someone, and not another, or started off doing well, and then developed problems. Get my drift? If someone doesn’t know how to earn and maintain a horse’s respect and trust for themselves, it doesn’t matter how “broke” a horse is, that horse will eventually become disrespectful, inconsistent, fearful, etc., because he won’t feel safe in the partnership.
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