Professional Horse Trainers in Arizona


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Home > Horse Trainer Directory: Arizona

 

Find equine professionals near you. For example: 

Q: How can I find John Lyons horse trainers near me in Baton Rouge, LA?
A: Individual listings indicate whether each horseman is certified by famous trainers such as John Lyons, Richard Shrake and Pat Parelli—or if they're "independent operators." Click on the links in the left column, "Louisiana" in this case, for a city-by-city listing of pro horse trainers near you.

Q: How do I locate a good horse trainer in Tennessee?
A: Clicking on "Tennessee" will bring you to a directory of horse training professionals in Tennessee. Make sure you ask for references - and call those prior clients before trying out any trainer. Remember, more often than not, saving a few pennies up front (on a fly-by-night so-called "pro") will cost you in the long run. How much do broken ribs cost these days in terms of hospital bills and lost work?

 

Your Local Horse Trainers (horse training in Arizona, most pros within 250 miles):

Apache Junction Benson Camp Verde Cave Creek
Chandler Cottonwood Dragoon Fredonia
Gilbert Glendale Higley Huachuca City
Lake Havasu City Litchfield Park Marana Maricopa
Mesa Patagonia Phoenix Prescott
Queen Creek Scottsdale Sedona Sierra Vista
Somerton Tucson Wickenburg Yuma


 

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Get On Your Horse: Curing Your Mounting Problems eBook

Get On Your Horse: Curing Your Mounting Problems
Horse owners and riders: If you'd like to put a solid foundation on your horse - or finally put an end to a nagging training issue, I would suggest the investment of a few dollars in one of my downloadable books:

- Download and print from your home computer
- 5 days, 5 chapters
- Learn at your own pace

Consider Get On Your Horse: Curing Your Mounting Problems:

Consider Teach your horse to show respect, to move to the mounting block, to lunge, and to stand rock solid with this 5-Day guide featuring the methods of John Lyons. Download and print from your own computer in just minutes. Includes a bonus article: "Cinchy Horses." (And another bonus beyond that! Read on!):

An excerpt:

Beyond moving away as you prepare to mount up, has your horse picked up other annoying habits? Does he bang impatiently on the stall at feeding time? Or lead poorly or buck or bite or kick out during a speed transition or drop his head to eat grass or forget you exist when whinnying to his buddies or "get cinchy" or act the fool for the farrier...? Has your horse come to see you as underling? When the answer is “yes,” know that while remedying this behavior certainly brings about positive results in a broad sense – it is a primary key to fixing the horse that moves off at the mounting block. Today we begin by diagnosing just how much control we have versus what we think we have; wresting back control we might have unconsciously ceded, improving "manners" and advancing our training in general. Some of you will test your horses, they'll pass and you can move on to something else. I hazard to guess, however, that lots of you reading this will discover that a little tune up is necessary. And that is fine – either way – because what we’ll additionally gain here is a base line, or a “place to start.” Days from now you might use it to measure your advance; you might use it as your position to fall back to if we push too hard in our training. On any account, you’ll be stating to the world that “from now on, things are going to be different.”

Read more or purchase

Other available courses include:

When Your Horse Rears: How to Stop It
Get On Your Horse: Fix Your Mounting Problems
How to Start a Horse: Bridling to 1st Ride
Your Foal: Essential Training
Stop Bucking (reviews)
Round Pen: First Steps (reviews)
Rein In Your Horse's Speed (For Owners of Nervous or Bolting Horses) (reviews)
Trailer Training (read the reviews)