When Gerald Alexander modified his training program, he began to
Transcription
When Gerald Alexander modified his training program, he began to
032-036_Alexander_02.qxd 6/7/06 2:49 PM When Gerald Alexander modified his training program, he began to focus on moving the horse’s ribcage to the outside as he turned it over its hocks. Page 32 032-036_Alexander_02.qxd 6/7/06 2:49 PM Page 33 Remodeling a Method Despite having started many 2-year-olds that went on to stardom, veteran trainer Gerald Alexander wasn’t completely satisfied with his program. After making drastic changes last year, his horses are now working cattle on a new level. Article and photos by Ross Hecox M ost cutters recognize Gerald Alexander as one of the best at starting young horses on cattle. The 58-year-old trainer works almost exclusively with 2-year-old prospects, and many top trainers have put the finishing touches on his horses and have shown them to prestigious titles. Despite Alexander’s success, last year he began to reevaluate the program he has used for more than 20 years. Having studied the methods of several top cutting horse trainers, he was no longer satisfied with how his horses worked cattle. “I could see some different things other boys were doing that I liked,” Alexander said. “It’s about getting your horses in position to do something, where it’s easier for them. “It’s not easy to get the concept. I like to watch these boys and try to pick up stuff. And they try to tell you what they’re doing, but there’s a lot to it. It’s not an easy task. “I kinda knew what I wanted, but I didn’t know exactly how to get it. I’ve played with it for a year and a half now, and I’m just now putting some things together where I have a program. I’ve definitely changed it pretty dramatically.” Alexander may not claim to have it completely figured out, but the results are certainly more conclusive. “I’m feeling my way a little bit still, but not near as much as I was last year,” he said. “It looks to me like I have as good a set of colts as I’ve ever had at this time of the year. They may go south on me, I don’t know—but I don’t think so. They’re a lot more correct and want to cut. They’re showing more cow. To me, they’re a hundred times better.” Modifying the Method Watching 2-year-olds work cattle is probably not the most entertaining way to spend a day. The young horses often move sloppy and slow and sometimes don’t pay much attention to the cow. The trainer is teaching the basics of going where the cow goes, stopping with it, and turning around when it changes direction. A lot of time is spent getting the horse to stop and turn around correctly, and both maneuvers require it to stay on its hindquarters. Trainers want the horse to make a 180-degree turnaround with the cow, balancing on its hindend and turning back through itself, nose first. All trainers are trying to teach the same general movement to their cutting prospects. But the methods they use vary. Even trainers with the same philosophies and techniques will inadvertently school differently. The variation might simply be in the amount of focus on stops, or being pickier about the horse’s frame, or using their hands quicker or softer. When Alexander decided to modify his program, he didn’t change his overall philosophy or goals for how his 2-year-olds should work a cow. However, he changed his approach and expectations, which translated to adding some exercises and using his hands and feet differently. These subtle adjustments resulted in a dramatic improvement in his horses. Alexander’s biggest adjustment was getting his horses collected and positioned to maneuver on cattle more efficiently, something he didn’t strive for in the past. “They’re shaped up better, ready to turn,” he said. “It seems like they’re on the right foot. They’re using the right muscles.” When turning with the cow, Alexander wants his horses to plant their outside hind leg and turn around nose first. July 2006 PERFORMANCE HORSE 33 032-036_Alexander_02.qxd 6/7/06 2:50 PM Page 34 During the past year, Alexander began working on getting his horses softer in the face. Alexander doesn’t engage the horse’s hindquarters and round its body only when working a cow; he works on collection at all times. “I do all kinds of things before I work every horse,” Alexander said. “I do some circles, push them off my leg—just make them think light and try to do it all with them off the bridle somewhat. “It keeps them lighter. They’re not dragging on you. They’re different horses, even loping around. They trot a lot smoother, like a pleasure horse almost. They’re different than what mine normally felt like.” Getting his horses soft in the face has also made them more correct on a cow. “There’s a lot I do with the face,” Alexander said. “I never got a horse off the bridle much before. But this year I’ve done a bunch of setting heads. If my colts are not stopping like they ought to, nine times out of ten they’re pushing on that bridle too much. “It’s tough getting them off the bridle and not getting them over-tucked. You don’t want them over-tucked. Sometimes I’ll overdo it with my hands, but I try to associate everything [I do] with my hands as light.” In the past, Alexander put plenty of emphasis on training his horses to stop hard. Nevertheless, improving his horses’ frame has made them stick their hocks in the ground more voluntarily. “I could have them stopping just as hard, maybe even harder, the other way,” he said. “But I’ve noticed these colts will stop quicker, 34 PERFORMANCE HORSE July 2006 Alexander often trots circles, encouraging his horses to move in a collected frame. just as hard, and on their own with the cow. Before, I might have had to help them a little. “I’ve always taught my horses to stop on a loose rein, even in dry work. But [stopping with a cow] was a little bit delayed. I don’t see that delay in these colts. They know where the stop is.” Once his 2-year-olds hit the brakes, Alexander wants them to stand still and wait on the cow’s next move. But he also wants them to maintain a posture that positions them for a quick turnaround. That involves keeping the ribcage pushed to the outside. “I probably spend a little more time [training the turnaround] because you got to teach them to get that ribcage out of the way,” Alexander said. “And that’s not real easy.” When at a standstill, Alexander has always taught the horse to bend its neck and look at the cow, but he didn’t work on its ribcage at all. Now he uses his inside leg to arc the horse’s body while it’s waiting on the cow. “I didn’t worry about it before,” he said. “I would try to get my horses coming [through the turn] with their nose. I’d stop them and make them look. But I didn’t like it because they were falling down through the turns unless I held them and backed them up. It was almost like an extra step.” Rather than having to back his horses to set 032-036_Alexander_02.qxd 6/7/06 2:51 PM up a clean turnaround, Alexander now finds that his horses can make correct turns from a standstill. Instead of rocking backward as the cow leaves, and then swinging on their hindquarters like a door on a hinge, it’s more common for his horses to coil their body, snake through the turn and then push out of it with their outside hind leg. Page 35 about the cow. When Alexander began to focus more on the technical aspects, one might have guessed it would be detrimental to his horses’ cow smarts. “You would think that would take the cow out of a horse,” Alexander said. “For me, it has put cow in them. They take ahold of a cow better.” Alexander continues to alternate the focus of his training sessions from correctness to cow smarts. Sometimes you have to forgive a little trashy movement and let the horse hunt the cow. Other times you can’t let the horse’s cow instincts compromise quality movement. “You go back and forth,” Alexander said. “I get them cowing and wanting to go, then I’ll straighten up their shoulders a little if they’re off. I’ll catch them if they get too bold and just walk them through that turn. You’re mixing both concepts, trying to get those colts to cutting on their own.” Alexander admits that he’s not entirely sure of all the factors that have made his horses more cow smart. But he points to at least one reason. He noticed a big difference when, after coming to a standstill, he began riding toward “ They’re shaped up better, ready to turn. It seems like they’re on the right foot. They’re using the right muscles.” Although he finds that backing his horses is no longer as important for teaching the turnaround, he still backs them often. “I back them up just as much, or maybe more,” Alexander said. “But it’s more of a correct, controlled backup. I want them collected, taking short steps up under themselves.” Mixing Cows and Collection Most trainers agree that giving too many cues distracts a horse from the cow. Training a cow horse requires a constant balance of showing it how to move and teaching it to think Collection helps horses become more correct and efficient at turning around, resulting in shorter training sessions. the cow instead of waiting for long periods of time until the cow moved. “I didn’t do a lot of that before,” he said. “Now I position them. And if the cow doesn’t move, I go to the cow. “It’s amazing to me what little bitty things do for these horses. It changes stuff tremendously. As soon as I started walking the horses to the cow, letting the horse move—like I’m cutting out a cow, almost—these horses started cowing. “Why I did that, I’ll never know. I had a mare that I worked on some sorry cows one time. I decided to work her a little different. I kind of set her, then dropped [the reins on] her, trying to get her to take the cow. Her head dropped—everything dropped. But I was kind of in a forward motion to the cow. And then I could stop her flat, get her back in position, and she’d come through that turn by herself.” Alexander said that, since he modified his program, his horses have also advanced through their training more quickly. Usually his best 2-year-olds have learned enough by July and get a two-month break from the training pen. But this year many of his prospects took an early vacation at the end of May. Alexander also said that his training sessions are now shorter. Alexander’s horses stopped hard in the past, but now they get into the ground more quickly. July 2006 PERFORMANCE HORSE 35 032-036_Alexander_02.qxd 6/7/06 2:52 PM Page 36 About Gerald Alexander Stepping forward during a lull has helped Alexander’s horses pay more attention to the cow. When backing, Alexander wants his horses to stay in frame and keep their legs underneath. muscles. You’re not dragging one into the ground with everything as stiff as a board, then asking him to turn around. “If you got him collected and he stops, he’s in his stop mode. You’re gonna have fewer sore horses.” Alexander doesn’t regard his new methods as anything particularly innovative or better than the techniques of other trainers, but he does recognize that they’ve taken his program to a whole new level. “You spend a lot of time teaching them how to do this,” he said. “[Now], they’re more re- “ I’ve noticed these colts will stop quicker, just as hard, and on their own with the cow. Before, I might have had to help them a little.” “I might work a colt 10 minutes, where [before] I’d work him 45,” he said. “I don’t know what it is about it. This stuff makes my work with a colt a lot easier and simpler.” And Alexander suspects that their improved efficiency has improved soundness. “I think the reason for that is they’re more collected,” he said. “They’re using the right 36 PERFORMANCE HORSE July 2006 Gerald Alexander grew up in Jonesboro, Louisiana, and graduated from Louisiana Tech University. He began training and showing for all kinds of events, including halter, pleasure, roping and reining. Alexander says that his reining background continues to influence his methods today. In the early 1980s, Alexander switched to training cutting horses, specializing in starting 2-year-olds on cattle. Although he points out that a horse’s success has much to do with who finished and showed it, the list of show pen stars that started in his barn is impressive. Among Alexander’s greatest prospects were NCHA Futurity Champions Dainty Playgirl and San Tule Freckles, Reserve Futurity Champions Mr Beamon and Peptocandy, Derby Champion Sue, and Reserve Derby Champion Blue Duck Okie. During the past eight years, 15 horses that started with him have advanced to the Open Futurity finals, including five that made it in 2001. Alexander trains out of Silverado on the Brazos in Weatherford, Texas. He and his wife, Kaye, moved to Weatherford in 2005. Alexander noted that Kaye’s knowledge of training, along with her critical eye, has helped him succeed and played an important role in modifying his program. “She helped me figure this out,” he said. “She can see a world of stuff that you can’t feel. She could probably train one better than me. I’m real fortunate to have her.” laxed, more comfortable doing it. They want to get into that position somewhat on their own. “And they’re not gonna do this great and perfect every time. And it looks like, ‘Well, he’s just doing what everybody else does.’ And I am, really. But I also can put that colt where I want him. “It’s just what’s good for me. And to me, my colts are better.”