Professional Horse Trainers in Maryland


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Home > Horse Trainer Directory: Maryland

 

Find equine professionals near you. For example: 

Q: How can I find John Lyons horse trainers near me in Kansas City, MO?
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, "Missouri" 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 North Dakota?
A: Clicking on "North Dakota" will bring you to a directory of horse training professionals in North Dakota. 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 Maryland, most pros within 250 miles):

Beallsville Bethesda Bowie Burkittsville
Centreville Clear Spring Cockeysville Cumberland
Darlington Deale Dickerson Eden
Elkton Gaithersburg Hagerstown Highland
Ijamsville Joppa Keymar Monkton
Oakland Poolesville Salisbury Sudlersville
West Friendship


 

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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:

Your horse is always learning from you – 24/7, he never shuts down. Letting some small transgression slide now because you’re not in the middle of a training session or tired or too busy gnaws away at the respect we accumulated yesterday. Instead, let’s stop reacting to what our horse dishes out and instead be proactive. The first thing I want you to do is the following: When working, walking or otherwise moving near your horse(s), begin expecting the animal to move out of your path as you approach as did the Red Sea from Moses. Look for opportunities. If your horse meanders between you and the gate, don't walk around the horse to the exit. “Kiss him” back out of your way, raise your arms and raise heck if you have to. Be assertive. (Flip it around and know that it’d certainly register with your horse if, in that moment, he caused you to back off.) If you dump out the feed and your horse nonchalantly drops himself in between you and the trough, then send him back out of your space immediately and resolutely – and keep him there till you’re through. We’re not being harsh here; this is low-hanging fruit training. It’s the easy and obvious stuff that takes little effort from you or the horse. Assert yourself a few times and you’ll be amazed how rarely you have to raise any sort of a fuss as days go by. You’ll need to remain vigilant, of course – but you’ll easily maintain your standing when, from this day forward, you no longer allow yourself to be dissed.

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)