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You Can Train Your Horse to Do Anything!: On Target Training Clicker Training and Beyond | 
enlarge | Authors: Shawna Karrasch, Vinton Karrasch, Arlene Newman Publisher: Trafalgar Square Books Category: Book
List Price: $27.50 Buy New: $14.93 You Save: $12.57 (46%)
New (16) Used (17) from $11.73
Avg. Customer Rating: 9 reviews Sales Rank: 798455
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 172 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9 Dimensions (in): 10.4 x 7.1 x 0.8
ISBN: 1570761655 Dewey Decimal Number: 636.1088 EAN: 9781570761652 ASIN: 1570761655
Publication Date: September 1, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: b
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
On Target Training is a revolutionary reward reinforcement training method specially developed for horses by animal training experts Shawna and Vinton Karrasch.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 4 more reviews...
Disappointing and repetitive June 22, 2005 8 out of 11 found this review helpful
I appreciate that this review area should be for the book, but I purchased the VHS of the same name and was extremely disappointed in the quality of the production and ideas being presented. If you are already familiar with clicker training you will probably be too advanced for this book - Shawna's only for complete beginners.
I've now read the book and am glad I didn't spend money on it. Highly repetitive and few ideas. Very basic information and some of the ideas may even put you on a different path from more recognised clicker trainers - such as the treatless click. BTW Shawna doesn't call her system clicker training simply for the ability to TM her marketing material.
If you are looking for a really excellent book on clicker training I would purchase the Alexandra Kurland books instead.
Update: I've just been to see a clinic with Shawna and have to repeat that I think this author is a bit light on theory. Shawna's background is as a trainer at Sea world so she has great presentation skills and can talk in a very entertaining way. However, she has fewer ideas on training and a lighter knowledge of operant conditioning (which is what clicker training is) than Kurland. If you knew nothing about clicker you would have enjoyed the clinic however I got very little out of it. Most worryinig is her lack of understanding (or ability to explain) the other consequences of operant conditioning which are still important for horse training.
Good intro to clicker training June 16, 2005 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a solid introduction to clicker training. You start by teaching your horse to associate the sound of the clicker with a treat, then use the motivation of the reward to shape behavior. I got my horse to willingly accept the bridle in one day after reading this book.
I would offer three cautions to prospective purchasers of this book. First, there are three keys to training, regardless of method. First you have to figure out how to break your goal into steps small enough for the horse to get. Then you have to time the reward (the click in clicker training, or the release of rein or leg pressure in John Lyons, Monte Roberts, Clinton Anderson, etc. method) Finally you have to patiently and diligently perform your training over the necessary weeks to achieve results. Use a bad plan, reinforce the wrong thing with bad timing, or don't put in the work and no book can help you.
Second, while clicker training can be a very efficient means of shaping behavior, I had difficulty using it to improve my leadership relationship with my horse. If your horse is spooky under saddle, he's telling you he feels like he's on his own. No matter how much desensitizing I did on the ground, my horse still got nervous on the trail. After one session of lunging for respect from Clinton Anderson's Downunder Horsemanship, his attitude and confidence was transformed. So you might not want to limit your training technique to just clicker training.
Third, I thought the book bogged a little bit in the description of the scientific basis for operant conditioning and the author's journey from training sea mammals to horses. All good material, but it's not why I bought the book. I would have vastly preferred more practical horse technique. The video has a lengthy talking head section on theory, which I found very frustrating. Show us the horses!
Those three caveats aside, I believe clicker training is a useful tool that anyone who trains horses should comprehend, and this is probably the best introduction to it.
Update, November 2007
I was recently invited to join a trail ride and hadn't been on my horse in months. I wanted to get in a few quick tune-up rides before the big weekend, but the first time I offered him the bridle, my horse raised his head and turned it away. Rather than fight with him, I decided to see if he had any memory of clicker training.
I ran into the house for an apple and broke it into a couple of pieces. This time, when I offered him the bridle I waited until he turned his head back where it belonged, made a clicking noise with my tongue, and gave him a bite of apple. When I offered him the bridle the second time he opened his mouth for the bit! I rewarded him again, then put on the bridle and rewarded him a third time. Since then, every bridling has gone very smoothly, with rewards or without.
I don't know of a faster, easier, or more effective way to deal with that situation than clicker training. And I don't know of a better way to learn it than this book.
An excellent introduction to clicker training January 12, 2004 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
An excellent introduction to the beginner, this book gives you a step by step guide to clicker training your horse - And it works! Although I don't use the technique on a daily basis, I have found it particularly useful in overcoming problems like mane pulling, accepting dewormer, desensitizing ears, etc.
You Can Train Your Horse to do Almost Anything!: On Target T September 11, 2003 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
Incredible! I just recently heard of this method so I bought the book. I applied the method to a 10 year old mare who had the following problems: Hard to catch, high strung, generally rotten disposition, scared to stand for the stallion, the list goes on. I am NOT a horse trainer, but the mare was headed for an uncertain future, so I figured I'd give this a try. Within our first two weeks she in now easy to catch and comes on the run when she sees me in or near her pasture. She willingly picks up her feet for farrier work, will back up straight for 35 feet on a voice command given from 10 feet away (no halter), she calmly follows me around the yard without restraint - even when we stroll past the stallion's gate. Within the next week she will be ridden for the first time and I expect, with her new calmness, she will return to the broodmare band in the spring.
Wonderful May 7, 2002 9 out of 11 found this review helpful
This wonderful book is true to its name. I have taught my horse such highly advanced skills as rearing up on command and spitting. Getting creative, I tried this training method on the neighbor's girl that I baby sit. Highly effective. I am very pleased.
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