Australian horse trainer
& clinician, Clinton Anderson

Horse Training and Problem Solving Videos

Click here to see all the horse training videos

Does your horse have any of these problems?

  • Rearing
  • Kicking
  • Biting
  • Barn sour or refuses to leave other horses
  • Runs over the top of you
  • Pushes you around and won’t behave
  • Won’t respond to cues
  • Bad manners and general lack of respect
  • Takes off with you for no reason
  • Balks and refuses to go forward
  • Spooks all the time
  • Out of control or no control at all
  • Stiff, heavy and hard in the mouth
  • Ignores leg pressure
  • Won’t stop, turn or go where you want
  • Won’t lope slow on a loose rein

If your horse has any of the problems listed above or is just difficult to train in general, then the following information may be just what you’re looking for.

Every once in a while a set of training videos come along that are so exceptional that I have to tell people about them. This is one of those times.

Seldom do I ever recommend a video series as highly as I do this one. If you are experiencing problems with your horse, these videos will show you how to fix them.

The videos I’m talking about are the new ones produced by Australian horse trainer, Clinton Anderson.

I have to hand it to Clinton, he put a lot of thought and effort into making these videos the best and most complete guide to solving the problems that plague most horse owners.

Clinton promises his training methods will work on your horse and I have to agree. These are training techniques that will WORK on ANY horse.

Clinton also does an outstanding job of explaining what to do. He not only shows you what to do, he shows you how to do it. He also covers the mistakes the horse (and owner) are likely to make. Nothing is left to chance. Clinton explains it all.

Sorry, the Clinton Anderson videos are no longer available on this website.

Contact Clinton directly for availability.

15 Responses to “Clinton Anderson Videos”

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  1. Would like more info. on your horse videos on horse training and problem solving. I like watching you work with horses, I have been around horses all my life and I love learning new ways to work with them. Althou I”m not young and dumb any more I don’t bounce like I use to. I have a beautiful paint mare, I bought her from some people who told me they saddled her and rode her but it had been a couple of years since they had been on her, her mother was starved and they didn’t even know the mare was pregnant, then saw this filly out in the field of their neighbors, they felt sorry for the mare so they bought her, how ever they had to bottle feed the baby for awhile so the mare could make milk. So I think this mare I have is very bonded to people. She is 8 years old pretty well mannered on the ground, but when you put a saddle on her and try to get on her, she’s a whole different horse, or tiring to load her in my horse trailer she rears up throws her head. I don’t want her to get hurt or myself. So I need so advise to help me with this.
    Kind Regards.
    Jackie

  2. Cheyanne says:

    How do you work with a horse that is arena sour?
    How do you start a colt on the ground?
    How do you get your horse to stop running away from you in the pasture?
    How do you get them to follow you and trust you?
    How do you get the horse to ride with their head down and be relaxed?
    How do you get a arena sour horse to ride in the arena again without charging or not listening?
    How do you ride with no reins and no saddle and direct with your body and with legs, and have the horse listen to you without charging or anything like that?

  3. brian jay peach says:

    when grazeing an wont come back to you, An would run away from you.

    • Cheyanne says:

      When a horse is grazing and won’t come back to yo and they run away and won’t let you catch them, if you have some kind of pen, you herd them into the pen and you corner them until they get it in their minds that you are the boss and you are not going to give up, that you will catch them. When you have gotten that horse caught rub on em talk to em, and when you are done with whatever you had done with them brush, give a little bit of grain, to let them know that they get rewarded for good behavior but, disciplined for bad behavior. This will take a while so you have to be patient. I have to do the same thing for one of my own horses.
      Cheyanne

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