Life First, Horsemanship Second
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When a horse develops a behavioural problem, most of us reach for training.
More lessons. More exercises. Better technique. A different method.
But what if the horse isn't expressing a training problem at all?
What if they're expressing a living problem?
In this episode of Horse First, Lockie Phillips explores one of the most overlooked realities in modern horsemanship: horses spend far more time living in their management systems than they do being trained within them.
From difficult-to-catch horses and separation anxiety to tension, explosiveness, and so-called laziness, Lockie examines how movement, forage, social contact, comfort, and predictability shape behaviour long before a trainer enters the picture.
This is not an argument against training.
It's an argument for looking at the whole horse.
Because before we ask how to change a behaviour, it may be worth asking what problem that behaviour is solving for the horse.
Sometimes the answer isn't a better technique.
Sometimes it's a better life.
And remarkably often, when the life improves, the behaviour follows.
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