How Race Horses Are Trained
By Steve Thompson, published Aug 03, 2007
Published Content: 2,656 Total Views: 1,971,599 Favorited By: 157 CPs
Race horses are usually trained at large Thoroughbred farms, often in Kentucky, which is thought of as the home for Thoroughbred horse racing. Many farms have multiple operations, including the training of race horses and the breeding of the same. Once a horse reaches training age, it is moved from the breeding section of the farm and started on a training program.
Although it differs from trainer to trainer, most race horses begin their careers at 1.5 years of age. Some trainers will work with yearlings on flat work, but you have to realize that horses' legs don't fuse until they are nearly four years of age, so working with horses that young is dangerous. Since many race horses are worth more than $500,000 before they even enter a competition, it is important for horse trainers to protect their employers' investments.
Horse racing, more than any other equestrian sport, is a business. Race horses are trained based on a protocol that was developed decades ago by master trainers. The process usually starts on the lunge line in a round pen, as young horses are taught to respond to verbal commands and to respect their trainers' instructions. Then they are moved into saddle training, which is far more interesting.
Unlike horses trained for pleasure or other equestrian sports, race horses do not need to know how to trot, canter, yield and halt; they simply need to know how to run. They are ridden mostly to the left because that is the direction in which they will run on the track, and gaits other than the gallop are of little importance. In the beginning, trainers want to figure out if a horse is a distance runner or a sprinter.
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