
Shaping is a term used in behavioural psychology and
understood by animal trainers of many different species. It is about
targeting and rewarding responses, then step by step adding more
refinement towards the ultimate desired response. A performing dolphin,
for example, is progressively trained to not only leap out of the
water, but also to add a couple of somersaults and in tandem with
other dolphins doing the same thing. This is impossible without shaping.
In my interpretation of shaping as it applies to horse training you
should first achieve control of the horse’s legs in terms of
obedience (immediate and from a light aid) then train rhythm and
then straightness and finally the outline or head carriage. In the
end the important thing is the consistency of the responses that
arise from the aids. It doesn’t matter whether you train Western,
Australian Stock horse or dressage – a well trained horse has
consistent outcomes from the aids. This occurs through breaking down
all aspects of training to single trainable units then building on
them. Each one has to be consolidated on its own. That means repeat
and repeat until the horse offers the same response to the aid each
time. Then you move up the ladder and train the next quality, consolidate
that one and so on and so forth. Eventually you end up with the final
outcome.
In a trained horse, it isn’t enough that when you squeeze your
legs that the horse goes forward any way he chooses. You have to
gradually mould his behaviour by training one aspect of a response
at a time. In the earliest stage of training, a horse might go forward
with various delays and from only heavy aids. He might be heavy in
the hands and running; he might be crooked, with his head high and
back hollow, and with a kick out or two and some tail swishing. So
the task is to prioritise all the qualities of each response we want
and then add them on top of each other, one by one. Step by step
training is essential so that the horse himself can learn to repeat
the correct responses through many repetitions. When horses give
wrong responses, you cannot expect them to know what is right. Only
you know that. Training too many things at once places the horse
in a dilemma as to what response to offer at a given moment. Sticking
to one isolated aspect of a response allows the horse to quickly
get the hang of the right answer. It is also essential that we train
things in a particular order. Any old order just won’t do.
The order we train things is so that one aspect acts as a building
block for the establishment of the next.
Gustav Steinbrecht (1808-1885), one of the great luminaries in the
German equestrian tradition was adamant about the importance of shaping:
He declared that training exercises should not be hurried and should “…all
follow one another in such a way that the preceding exercise always
constitutes a secure basis for the next one. Violations of this rule
will always exert payment later on; not only by a triple loss of
time but very frequently by resistances, which for a long time if
not forever interfere with the relationship between horse and rider”.
Perhaps you should read this a second time. Steinbrecht did not write
this as a throw away line. He was absolutely emphatic about this
critical aspect of shaping and every behavioural scientist in the
world would support his warning. Yet not enough trainers build on
training in any logical way. These days, the first thing most of
us want to do is to pull the horse’s head in and make it round.
This makes no sense when the legs of the horse are not yet under
control. Furthermore, forcing lowering of the neck and roundness
of the outline is like painting a smile on the face of a miserably
depressed person. A horse’s outline should reflect his contentment.
When a horse is in true self-carriage in terms of rhythm, straightness
contact and impulsion, it tends to become round all by itself. I
can still hear Michel Henriquet’s words “The neck and
head of the horse are consequences of his legs – it cannot
be otherwise”.
In the twentieth century, a fellow by the name of Haungk developed
the German training scale. It evolved from the teachings of the Italian
master, Caprilli, the French master de la Guérinière,
the traditions of the school of Hanover and the teachings of the
German masters von Weyrother, Seegar, Seidler and Steinbrecht. The
German training scale is a progressive training scale that involves
the following steps:
1. Rhythm,
2. Looseness,
3. Contact and acceptance of the bit,
4. Impulsion,
5. Straightness and
6. Collection.
The German training scale is a step forward of major significance
in the practical and theoretical development of horse training. After
it was finalised in the early twentieth century, the Germans experienced
unparalleled Olympic success in dressage and jumping, and a major
part of this success must be a result of their systematic approach
to training.
Well before the German training scale was published, the Frenchman,
Francois Baucher developed his own training scale, which was integral
to his “second method”. Unfortunately he had already
been to Germany, on invitation, where his first method (a bit of
a fizzer compared to his second) was soundly rejected. Louis Seegar
and other noted German trainers were not impressed with the great
master Baucher. The Germans criticised Baucher’s constant use
of the aids, especially the spurs, which they attributed to his loose
rein connection. What’s more his horses were too much on the
forehand. One of the great steps forward of the evolving German training
system was the raising of the horse’s poll which made the movement ‘springy’ especially
when combined and developed through half-halts and transitions. Baucher
also insisted that all half-halts should involve the rider’s
leg before the rein, however Seegar, (Steinbrecht’s instructor)
disagreed. When the horse is already forward and the rein aids are
trained so as to cause the horse to ‘sit’ then the hand
can be used to initiate a half-halt before the leg. However there
was another ingredient in the Germans rejection of Baucher. In those
days, horse training was largely a practice of the military and the
wealthy. Baucher was neither, he came from a working class background
and worse still, the circus.
Baucher meanwhile had a very nasty accident while riding in the manège.
A giant chandelier fell on him injuring him so severely that he could
never ride again in public. He took years to recover. However his
injury had a legacy. It gave him time to reflect and experiment with
pupils, and sometime later he came up with his second method. This
one was far more worthy of a great master, and dealt with the earliest
stages of training. However, Baucher never published his second method,
and possibly the only written material that provides an accurate
description of that method was the description published in 1891
by one of Baucher’s pupils, Francois Faverot de Kerbrech. De
Kerbrech described Baucher as a ‘master scientist’ owing
to the attention Baucher paid to observation and experimentation.
Baucher probably learned some important lessons from his interactions
with other great trainers such as Seegar, and certainly his second
method bore little resemblance to his first. Baucher adhered to the
maxim ‘hands without legs, legs without hands’ and thus
avoided the confounding affect of the combination that destroys so
many horses today. In addition Baucher seemed to understand the processes
of negative reinforcement and the subsequent importance of the release
of pressure. He insisted on the importance of in-hand training with
the same qualities as under saddle, again something that is rarely
seen in today’s dressage trainer’s tool-box. De Kerbrech’s
writings suggest that Baucher’s second method incorporated ‘shaping’ responses
progressively though adhering to a set of requirements that are arranged
in the order of a training scale. These are as follows:
1. To train and adhere to lightness
2. To obtain obedience to the legs
3. To obtain straightness
4. To get the horse used to working without help from the aids
5. To collect and engage the horse.
In the system we have developed that largely arose from experience
in retraining, we follow the following shaping programme in foundation
training, training and re training:
1. Basic Attempt – the horse is rewarded for any good try that
resembles the right response. This applies to horses that do not
know or do not offer even a crudely correct response from the aid.
2. Obedience – the horse is made more ‘sharp’ i.e.
the response is initiated immediately and completed in three beats
of the rhythm of the gait. This results in the transformation of
signals from pressure to light aids. Losses of obedience occur at
all levels and are associated with most riding behaviour problems.
3. Rhythm - the horse moves in and out of transitions with evenly
spaced footfalls in the three beats. Rhythm is self-maintained (i.e.
cruise control) and the horse is able to lengthen and shorten the
stride in all gaits.
4. Straightness - is essentially a deeper aspect of rhythm. A crooked
horse is one where the horse’s legs have unequal drive – i.e.
they are not in equal rhythm and drive. A crooked horse therefore
tends to drift one way or the other depending on whether it is falling
out or falling in, unless it is held on line by the rider. The horse
should learn to hold his own straightness.
5. Contact – while the horse is already on a contact all the
way through training, he is now in a position where it can be further
refined as his legs are now fully under control. This is where final
aspects of the outline are developed, depending on the training stage
of the horse. In the earlier stages the horse learns to lengthen
his neck as his stride lengthens (longitudinal flexion); he then
learns to turn with lateral flexion and later learns vertical flexion
through the action of ‘inside leg to outside rein’.
6. Engagement – through upward and downward transitions and
half transitions the horse learns to lower the hindquarters (sit).
If these are maintained in three beats of the rhythm then the horse
develops impulsion and power and over time stronger musculature.
7. Proof – This means that responses with all of the above
qualities occur anywhere, any time the horse is given the aid. Of
course proof is happening all the time in that each training day
conditions change. However it is important to note that challenging
environments should only be tackled after consolidating good work
at home. How the horse copes with the different environments is a
direct reflection of the quality and consolidation of the work at
home.
In-hand work
Shaping of course doesn’t only apply to work under saddle – it
is essential for in-hand training also. From my experience, a horse
that is good under saddle but not so good in-hand is a time bomb.
Naturally confusions and contradictions in one area of training will
eventually infect the other. Ideally, in-hand work should also follow
the same training scale as under saddle. A properly trained horse
should lead without strong pressure on the lead rein but from a light
aid, without rushing or stalling, without crowding the handler (i.e.
straight) and with a correct carriage i.e. poll just above the withers.
It should also step backwards with the same qualities. It should
remain immobile when halted. Some trainers drive horses in long reins
to improve various aspects of training. Vince Corvi is one such Australian
trainer whose driving skills are highly developed and effective.
Driving horses correctly is a real skill and unfortunately most people
that do it allow incorrect behaviour and tension to be incorporated
into their work.
In-hand training was seen as essential by the nineteenth century
German master, E.F. Seidler. Seidler specialised in the rehabilitation
and training of the rather wild Polish horses that were used by the
German cavalry at Schwedt and later in Hanover. He used in-hand work
to correct “spoilt malicious horses who endanger the rider
by rearing, bucking, dangerous leaps and other obnoxious tactics……for
experience teaches that he who has thoroughly mastered the work in-hand
leads a horse within a few months to a higher level of activity than
he could by riding even in a longer time period.”
Let the horse make mistakes
Because horse training involves use of the bridle and driving aids,
it is tempting to prevent the horse from making mistakes during training.
However the making of mistakes is how an animal learns, through reinforcement,
what is the right answer and what is not. As I mentioned earlier,
training is not and should not be about holding the horse in some
kind of wrestling match between the hand and leg, but training him
to go on his own. In-hand many horses do not stand still when requested.
People then often resort to all sorts of gadgets. Yet all you need
to do is to loosen the lead, let him make the mistake of moving and
correct him – put him immediately back to where he was, then
loosen the lead again. The reason for this is partly that people
do not let the horse make mistakes and learn what he should and should
not do. Instead they permanently hold the lead rein firmly.
Training is about rewarding ‘every good try’. When training
lengthening at walk or trot, people are often afraid to let the horse
quicken his tempo, because lengthening is about maintaining the rhythm
yet increasing the stride length. The longer strides increase the
horse’s body speed without increasing leg speed. Many horses
will offer quickening of the legs instead of or as well as lengthening
of the stride. At least quickening is half right in that the horse
has increased his body speed. If the horse is allowed to quicken
yet still sent more forward, he will soon express a longer stride.
Then the aids must cease until he loses that longer stride and reapplied
to achieve it again. Length will always evolve from speed because
fast legs are inefficient in all quadrupeds. It is far easier for
an animal to achieve a faster body speed through longer strides than
faster ones. Obedient transitions in and out of longer and shorter
strides create rhythm.
Why consistency or uniformity?
When training is complete, you want the horse to perform the movement
the same way each time you press the button i.e. you want all the
elements of the correct response obedience, rhythm, straightness
and a consistent outline and with impulsion. All of these things
cover complete control of the horse’s entire body. In other
words there isn’t a body part left that can do its own thing.
Consistency you see, is not only what we as riders desire, it’s
good for the horse’s state of mind too. Professor Piet Wiepkema
of the Netherlands described consistent outcomes from stimuli as
critical to an animal’s mental well being. All animals including
humans have evolved to decrease stress when responses to stimuli
are consistent, and to increase stress when they are not. Real trust
comes about when one animal can ‘read’ another – when
a response to a stimulus is predictable. This gives animals (and
humans) control and certainty about their environment and resources.
In evolutionary terms, it’s a way of weeding out maladapted
individuals that develop chronic stress. There’s nothing worse
than unpredictability in others to raise your stress levels. Not
surprisingly, the more consistent an aid results in a uniform response,
the greater the calmness in horses. On the other hand, losses of
consistency and uniformity in animals (and people!) result in one
or more of the following three states: Aggression, tension or dullness.
Aggressive and tense behaviours include increased aggression towards
humans and other horses, shying, bucking, rearing and bolting. Chronic
conflict states also deeply affect the horse’s physiology and
immune status and can result in ulcers, colic, ‘catabolic’ condition
(stringy looking poor-doers) and even self mutilation (biting themselves).
Good training is good for the horse; bad training can be a death
sentence.