Horse word for stop

  • #1

Hi,
The following words are from an English teaching video by Blippi about to how to ride a horse(He pretend he is riding a horse):
First you grab the rein so you don’t fall off. And then you bounce up and down as if the horse is walking. …… If you want to get the horse to really fast, you talk to it and make noises, like you are a real cowboy or cowgirl. Are you ready? Yeah, yeah(while he is saying yeah, he begins to ride)

I guess the Yeahs are used to order the horse to run quickly, but what voice is used to make the horse stop and slow down? Could you give me some help please

Thank you in advance

  • lingobingo


    • #2

    I don’t understand that use of Yeah! I’m not aware of it being anything to do with horse-riding.

    But the traditional way of getting a horse to stop is to call out Woah! (also spelt whoa, apparently).

    Myridon


    • #3

    A cowboy might say «Hyah!» to a horse but not «Yeah!» :)

    Hermione Golightly


    • #4

    Traditionally you say ‘Giddy up!’ when you want your horse to start. I mean in rhymes and songs, but we have someone here who can tell us exactly, when she sees this. I can’t imagine a cowboy saying giddy-up!

    • #5

    Thank you three

    A cowboy might say «Hyah!» to a horse but not «Yeah!» :)

    Do Hyah and Yeah have the same sound?

    Chasint


    • #6

    Having listened, He says «Yah!» which is close to «Hyah!»

    I agree that «Whoa!» is used to slow and stop the horse. As demonstrated by Blippi in the same video.

    1621520626825.png

    whoa (hwō, wō), interj.

    1. stop! (used esp. to horses).

    whoa — WordReference.com Dictionary of English

    Last edited: May 20, 2021

    • #7

    Wow, just the video. But the video I’m watching has no subtitle. Thank you so much. And now I know yah for «start», whoa for «stop»

    entangledbank


    • #8

    The best (i.e. funniest) video to watch is Yosemite Sam in the Sahara Desert, chasing Bugs Bunny. He uses — or at least tries to use — both yah and giddy-up to make his camel move, and whoa to make it stop. (‘When I say whoa, I mean WHOA!’)

    Chasint


    • #9

    Wow, just the video. But the video I’m watching has no subtitle. Thank you so much. And now I know yah for «start», whoa for «stop»

    You may be able to switch captions on. Important! The captions are not always accurate because they are generated by AI. If in doubt, trust your ears rather than the captions. I noticed several errors while I was listening. A very odd example of an error is where the captions say «this is crying» instead of «this is fun». I can’t imagine how that came about.

    1621522048174.png

    • #10

    Hi,
    The following words are from an English teaching video by Blippi about to how to ride a horse(He pretend he is riding a horse):
    First you grab the rein so you don’t fall off. And then you bounce up and down as if the horse is walking. …… If you want to get the horse to really fast, you talk to it and make noises, like you are a real cowboy or cowgirl. Are you ready? Yeah, yeah(while he is saying yeah, he begins to ride)

    I guess the Yeahs are used to order the horse to run quickly, but what voice is used to make the horse stop and slow down? Could you give me some help please

    Thank you in advance

    I havent watched the video, but this sounds like it’s all meant for humor and should not be taken seriously as a guide to horseback riding.

    When we ride a horse competently we move our body in rhythm with the horse and communicate primarily through hands on reins and legs. If you try to keep your balance by hanging onto the reins, that’s a disaster. You need independent balance.

    Then you signal a horse to go with a touch of your calf. You signal a horse to stop with a touch on the reins, plus your body. You signal a horse to turn with a touch of reins plus your body. A trained horse takes very little pressure to guide.

    Horses are often trained to move forward at a cluck of the tongue, and to stop when you say whoa, but not always.

    Harness horses in the old days were more voiced trained, which is where some of the ideas about yelling commands comes from.

    Movies are not reliable guides to how to ride well.

    Of course you can say anything you want while you are riding and you can train a horse to respond to any cue or word. When I was a teenager we used to whoop as we galloped our horses at full speed down the trail. You could train a horse to walk by saying yeah yeah, but mostly we say yes to a horse to praise him. Horses need a lot of praise just like dogs.

    So this is clearly a humorous video from someone who does not know how to ride. Please don’t follow his advice if you end up in Canada taking riding lessons!!!

    kentix


    • #11

    Whoa is the only legitimate spelling I know. See #6.

    Myridon


    • #12

    The videos are meant to entertain toddlers.

    • #13

    The videos are meant to entertain toddlers.

    That totally makes sense.

    Very often, material for small children is not about the thing itself, but rather introducing them to our cultural stereotypes and conventions about the thing. In this case, how to play cowboy as seen in old Western movies and cartoons.

    Worth keeping in mind for English learners drawn to children’s material for language practice. The simplified language is clearly really useful. But keep in mind that the content is often simplified, jokey, or humorous and not to be taken literally.

    Last edited: May 20, 2021

    Do you want to teach your horse how to stop?

    Here are the five best exercises for teaching a horse to stop.

    Stopping is probably the most important thing for the horse to learn. You need to train your horse to do this well and here are some exercises you can use.

    Great Stopping Exercises For Horses

    Horse stopping exercises inside the fence

    When we are working with a green horse we need to start with easy exercises.

    Be aware, that a foal will not be able to stand still for very long. They have very short attention spans just like toddlers and you cannot expect them to pay attention for too long at a time. You need patience here and you need to take small steps every day and repeat everything over and over again.

    1) Teaching The Whoa Stop

    The “whoa” is the first command you should teach a horse. It’s the most important command as we need to be in full control of the horse at all times.

    Here’s exactly what we want to accomplish. We want the horse to do a complete stop when we say the word “Whoa” and we want it to do nothing until we give it the next command.

    1) Ride along a fence

    Take your horse for a walk or a slow trot. A good tip at this point is to ride along the fence. This will let you focus on teaching the stop command and not pay too much attention to steering.

    Riding along the fence also gives you another advantage.

    It will allow you to slightly pull the horse toward the fence if it refuses to stop. By doing so, the horse has to stop because he cannot turn directly into the fence.

    When you want to stop him you should sit up as let yourself “feel heavy” into the saddle.

    2) Pull the reins gently

    Now you pull the reigns a little bit to let him know that we want him to stop.

    Say “Whoa” every time you want him to stop in order to help him learn this aid. The first many times you pull the reign a little bit and release, basically to catch the attention of him.

    The first couple of times you might need to pull the reins in order to turn him toward the fence. This will let him know that you mean business. He will not want to walk into the fence and when you prompt him to do so he should stop after a little while.

    The first couple of times he actually stops you should praise him and tell him how good a boy he is. After a while, you shouldn’t praise him if you have to pull him toward the fence in order to make him stop.

    We only force him toward the fence to let him know what we are trying to accomplish. As soon as he gets it, you should use the reins together instead, so he is not prompted to make a turn. He will probably pick this up soon. If you are sensing that he knows actually what you want to accomplish, but still refuses, you should go on to the next step.

    3) Pull and release if you have to

    If this doesn’t get the horse to stop you can do multiple sets of easy “set-and-release” movements with the reins.

    This means that you tighten the tension on the reins and loosen that tension back up. You will let the horse know that you want it to stop.

    This should get the horse to stop.

    You need to sit down straight in the saddle so the horse doesn’t just pull you forward out of the saddle if he’s not set on stopping. You should let it pull you deeper in the saddle instead of pulling you forward. This position may take some work and it’s important that you get it right.

    The horse shouldn’t be able to pull you forward in the saddle. It needs to feel that you are a rock-solid foundation that is in full control at all times.

    4) Punish a slow stop

    If your horse is doing a very slow stop and you want it to respond faster you should back it up a little bit after you stop.

    You do this by adding a little tension to the reins in order to make it step backward a couple of steps. This will let the horse know that you are in control and it can work as a light punishment.

    The reason why this can function as a tiny punishment is that the horse just showed you that he wants to continue walking. So instead, we let him step a few steps backward which are the opposite of what he wants.

    If the horse refuses to stop…

    If you cannot get the horse to stop simply by telling it to do so or by adding a little pressure on the reins, here’s what you can do.

    First, you should shift your balance forward to make it harder for the horse to move the front legs. By doing so you are reinforcing the command to the horse.

    By moving your balance point forward on the horse you make it unnatural for the horse to keep going. It shouldn’t be able to move as easily and this will often cause the horse to stop immediately.

    The horse should know by now that you mean business.

    Secondly, you need to make sure you are applying an even force on the two ropes of the reins. If you are pulling one hand harder than the other you are basically telling the horse to turn around instead of stopping. This is important and you need to teach yourself how to do and even pull without pulling too hard on the reins.

    Great Tips For Teaching A Horse To Stop

    Here are a few other helpful tips on how to teach your horse to stop.

    1) Short stretches

    A good tip is to only walk short stretches between the many stops.

    Whenever you try to teach the horse to stop you need to stop often. Horses like to walk and if you wait too long between the many stops it may want to ignore you.

    By stopping and starting over and over again you reinforce what you want to teach and you also let it know exactly what’s going on.

    Horses have their own personality and temper and for some horses, it will be best to walk them slowly and do many stops while other horses prefer to stand still. When you know the horse you can decide whether it motivates them with a longer stop or a longer walk.

    2) Be (very) consistent

    You need to be very consistent with horses.

    If you teach the horse to stop within 5 steps you need to reinforce this rule every time. If, on the other hand, you teach the horse to stop within 3 steps, the need to reinforce this every time.

    This means that you should let the horse know that it did wrong if it stops after 6 steps if you taught it to stop after 5 steps.

    The stop command this one of the first things you will teach your horse so it’s very important that it also learns how consistent you want things to be. This will make it easier to work with the horse in the long run. It will quickly pick up that you are either consistent or not consistent.

    If you are not consistent with your rules the horse will become lazy and you would have a harder time teaching in a lot of other things as well.

    3) Ride him tired the first times

    Another great tip for teaching your horse to stop is to make him tired before you start the training. By doing so, he will want to stop and that can sometimes make it easier to make him listen.

    But pay attention to how the horse reacts.

    Some horses will not do well when they are tired. It might get too tiring (mentally) and then it can be hard to teach the horse anything. This tip is meant for horses that have a ton of energy. By letting them burn off some energy before you start working on the stop, it might get easier.

    4) Stop while accelerating

    When the horse is gaining speed, the hindquarters will be lowered a bit compared to the front end and this can make it easier to stop.

    Otherwise, the horse will sometimes bend too much forward, if you ask it to stop while it is already losing speed.

    5) Keep a relaxed position

    Many beginners will tighten up their whole body when they are about to get the horse to stop.

    This can be because you get a little nervous or simply because you try to concentrate really hard. But it’s really a bad idea.

    You need to sit relaxed in the seat in order for the horse to feel relaxed. The best thing you can do is to control your breathing and get into the stop at an exhale.

    By doing so consciously you make sure the horse doesn’t feel any tension from you. It would help the horse to see that this is a very natural thing is not something to be afraid of. It also helps you to do your movements right in order to push your feet a little forward and sit back into the saddle.

    You should let the force from the stop push you forward in the saddle without resisting it too much.

    Teaching A Horse To Slide Stop

    Teaching the horse to do a sliding stop

    Now that your horse knows how to stop you can work on teaching it to stop with a slide. If you are going fast you need to know how to do a sliding stop.

    The sliding stop is a special way for the horse to stop where it will lower its hind legs in order to do a quick stop.

    First, you need to take it up to a pretty high speed. Let it canter and find a good rhythm and make sure you sit well in the saddle so you can apply the force toward the saddle when you are going for a fast stop as the sliding stop. You need to lean back a little bit and be absolutely sure you are not leaning forward too much at this point.

    Now you will get ready to cue the horse by yelling “Whoa” and let it feel you pushing yourself down in the saddle. At the same time, you should let your legs swing forward to be ready for the stop.

    Make sure to make these bodily changes quickly so the horse knows that something is going on that needs attention NOW.

    Make sure not to pull back on the reins. The horse needs to stop by itself without you having to pull it out of him.

    Make sure to practice this over and over again until the horse is very confident and can do this without any trouble. You both need to know exactly how to react during a sliding stop.

    Don’t over-do it

    You should also be aware that this is not too easy for the horse. Some horses will find it to a lot of fun but other horses will not like to do sliding stops.

    You need to feel the horse and you shouldn’t push it forward if it doesn’t want to do it several times. It’s important to learn to do a sliding stop but it’s not something you want to do all the time.

    It’s pretty hard for the horse to do it and you should keep practicing it without stressing the horse. Make sure it still knows how to do it and listen to how it reacts.

    Remember To Praise The Horse

    You should always remember to praise the horse whenever it does what you want. Say something like “good girl” or a “good boy” and make sure to pad it gently on the side.

    This is very important because the horse is a very social creature and it will respond well to being praised.

    Just like you and I, it likes being told whenever it is doing something properly. This is also an important thing to do continuously in order to build trust and a good and strong relationship between you and the young horse.

    It will also let the horse know whenever it didn’t do what you wanted it to. Simply by avoiding to praise it whenever it was rebellious or didn’t stop when you wanted to do so.

    There are different ways of rewarding it. You can do so by telling it how well it did it and give it a little pad on the side. You shouldn’t give it a treat every time it does something well because it will want to have a treat every time in the future. There’s no need for this. It’s enough to price it verbally.

    You can also be rewarded by giving it a longer break if you feel like the horse likes to stand still. If your horse likes to run really fast you can also reward it by letting it canter for a while.

    What Do You Say To A Horse To Make It Stop?

    You yell “Whoa” in order to make a horse stop. You should sit deep in your saddle to make the horse feel that you want to slow down the rhythm. If this doesn’t work you can pull the reigns and even give the horse a little kick in the ribcage.

    It’s really important to stick to this word because it’s universally applied.

    Other riders might ride him at some point and they will use the same word when they need the horse to stop.

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    How to Ride Your Horse and Whoa, Halt or Stop

    Common horseback commands

    There are a few basic skills you will need to learn when first learning to ride. These are building blocks of becoming a good rider.

    The very first thing you will want to understand as you learn to ride is how to halt, whoa or stop. Your instructor may use any of those words when they want you to bring your horse to a standstill. Most likely, your first steps as you learn to ride will be the walk. But before you do that, you need to know how to stop.

    To cue for a halt, close your fingers and squeeze backward. The horse should stop as he feels the backward pull on the reins. As you use the rein aids, you will eventually learn to stop by using your body, seat, and legs. By stopping your body, you are cuing your horse to stop as well.

    As you gain skill and refine your aids you will push your seat deeper into the saddle, stiffen your back, close your legs on the horse slightly, and squeeze back on the reins. As soon as the horse responds and comes to a complete halt, the cue should be stopped. This doesn’t have to be forced. It sometimes helps to exhale as you ride into your halt.

    Sometimes you will need to apply a stronger aid, pulling backward if the horse is reluctant to stop. «Give and take» as the horse takes strides, squeezing back and easing up until the horse halts. You can also ask your horse with your voice to «whoa». Keep in mind, if you’re heading for the show ring, you won’t be able to use voice cues when you are riding in a horse show. Your cues for the halt should be smooth. There should be no ‘dead pull’ or jerking and jabbing on the reins. Ideally, you want your aids to be almost invisible.

    If the horse has halted correctly he will have his nose down, will not swing to one side, and will be standing more or less square (a leg ‘in each corner’). If the horse flips its head up, you may have applied the cue too sharply. If the horse swings or turns, you may not be holding the reins evenly.

    Tip: Don’t forget to breathe! As you are concentrating hard you may find you are holding your breath. Breathing naturally will help you stay relaxed in the saddle.

    Once you’ve come to a complete halt or stop, you may be asked to walk on, trot or jog or even canter or lope depending on how advanced your instruction is. If you have come to the halt because your ride is over, give your horse some praise, perhaps a scratch or pat on the neck. The dismount and loosen the girth or cinch, and if your ride is over run up the stirrups.

    Like any new skill, learning to halt will take time until it feels comfortable and natural. Eventually, it will come automatically and your ​aids will be more effective and unobtrusive. 

    What is the word for the action of telling the horse you are on to move forward, turn left, turn right, or the like?

    I assume «driving» would be the easiest to understand, but it sounds like it does not fit a living thing like a horse.

    The word «controlling» seems most accurate, yet controlling an animal gives negative connotations, does it not?

    asked Oct 10, 2015 at 22:59

    user2738698's user avatar

    2

    You can turn a horse, stop a horse, check a horse (slow down or stop it), spur a horse (tell it to go faster). But if you want the verb that corresponds to drive a car, it’s ride a horse.

    This is similar to a motorcycle; you can steer, turn, accelerate, or brake a motorcycle, but the verb that encompasses all of these is ride.

    answered Oct 11, 2015 at 1:24

    Peter Shor 's user avatar

    Peter Shor Peter Shor

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    1

    You can steer a horse. Although this might not cover the full range of commands. But it does cover turning and the like. Possibly also covers moving forward (see link.)

    answered Oct 10, 2015 at 23:13

    A.P.'s user avatar

    A.P.A.P.

    13.3k2 gold badges24 silver badges58 bronze badges

    Driving, in relation to horses, is the managing (from behind) of such horses as are pulling a plow, sled, or wheeled vehicle.

    I would suggest that besides ride you consider the verb manage:

    To control (a person or animal); to exert one’s authority or rule over. [OED]

    This is the more suitable for equestrian application in that the noun manage once meant

    The training, handling, and directing of a horse. With the: the art of training and managing horses. [OED]

    Thus Hotspur’s wife (in Shakespeare’s Henry IV Pt. 1 2.4) complains that in dreams her husband is wont to

    Speake tearmes of mannage to thy bounding steed.

    answered Oct 11, 2015 at 0:29

    Brian Donovan's user avatar

    Brian DonovanBrian Donovan

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    One rides a horse and steers with the reins.

    answered Oct 11, 2015 at 0:30

    Keltari's user avatar

    KeltariKeltari

    3141 silver badge9 bronze badges

    I think there is not a single verb that covers the action of «driving» a horse. I’ve found several entries in Macmillan Dictionary Online.
    Maybe this link can help as a kickstarter for further research.

    answered Oct 10, 2015 at 23:11

    martinsky's user avatar

    2

    You indeed «ride» a horse, i.e. sit on them and control their movement, but when it comes to urging a horse to move in a specified direction, you «drive» them.

    drive: [with object and adverbial of direction] Urge or force (animals or people) to move in a specified direction (OED)

    Jessie lowered her head and drove the horse uphill [urged the horse to move uphill], ignoring the wet branches that whipped and stung her legs. (Lone Star 25)

    Alternately, you can also guide a horse.

    guide: to direct or control the path or course of (something) (M-W)

    He adjusted his hat and guided the horse uphill through a stand of yellow pine. (Common Threads)

    Community's user avatar

    answered Oct 11, 2015 at 3:04

    Elian's user avatar

    ElianElian

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    1

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