How to Mount a Horse for the First Time
Tools You’ll Need
- Saddle
- Bridle and reins
- Helmet
- Safe round pen or controlled arena
- Good flexion already taught
- Basic lunging already taught
- Patience
- Experienced help if needed
Mounting a horse for the first time is not just about getting on. It is about preparing the horse for movement, noise, weight, balance changes, and the feeling of a rider before you fully commit yourself to the saddle.
What’s Really Going On
The first mount is not one single moment. It is a process. If you treat it like the only goal is to get your leg over the saddle, you can skip the very parts that keep you safe.
The horse needs to understand that movement around the saddle, noise from the stirrups, weight in the stirrup, pulling on the saddle horn, and a person climbing up beside it are not reasons to panic.
If you skip these steps, the horse may stand fine while saddled, then blow up the second your weight hits the stirrup. That does not mean the horse is evil. It means you introduced a brand-new feeling at the worst possible time.
This lesson is about preparing the horse before you are trapped halfway on. You want control before something goes wrong, not after. That is why flexion matters. Bending the nose toward you gives you a safety handle. A horse cannot buck, bolt, or leave as effectively when its nose is bent around toward your leg.
The other rule is simple: movement does not get the release. Stillness gets the release. If the horse moves when you flap the stirrups, push on the saddle, or add weight, you go with it and keep the lesson going until the horse stops. Then you release.
How to Teach It
Step 1: Reintroduce Noise and Movement
Put the stirrups back down and start moving the fenders around. Slap the fenders lightly against the saddle. Let the horse hear the leather, feel the movement, and understand that noise near its sides does not mean danger. Start light. You can build from there.
Step 2: If the Horse Moves, Go with It
If the horse walks off, jumps sideways, or gets nervous, do not stop the lesson right there. Go with the horse and keep the same pressure going until it stops moving. When the horse stands still, release. That teaches the horse that standing quietly is where comfort is found.
Step 3: Increase the Saddle Movement Gradually
Once the horse handles light movement, get louder and more active. Flap the fenders more. Move the stirrups. Let the saddle make noise. You are not abusing the horse. You are preparing it so the first mount does not become the first time it feels sudden movement around the saddle.
Step 4: Push and Pull on the Saddle
Grab the saddle horn and move the saddle around. Push it. Pull it. Rock it side to side. The horse needs to feel the saddle shift before your body weight is involved. This is close to what it will feel when you climb on, lose balance a little, or settle into the seat.
Step 5: Add Weight Without Mounting
Press down on the stirrup with your hand. Put some weight in it. Then try placing your knee in the stirrup or leaning some body weight over the saddle. Do not swing your leg over yet. The horse needs to feel weight being added before you fully commit yourself to getting on.
Step 6: Act a Little Ridiculous
Jump around beside the horse. Move quickly. Bounce near the saddle. Make some noise. Mounting for the first time will not be perfectly smooth, and the horse needs to handle sudden movement without falling apart. Do this in a controlled way, but do not be so quiet that the horse is shocked later by normal human clumsiness.
Step 7: Lunge Again if the Horse Gets Too Fresh
If the horse gets too reactive, nervous, or full of energy, go back to lunging. Get the horse moving, thinking, and a little tired. A horse with its brain working is safer than a horse full of extra energy while you are trying to climb on.
Step 8: Flex the Nose Before Your Foot Goes In
Before you put your foot in the stirrup, bend the horse’s nose toward you. This is your control. This is your safety. Do not skip it. If the horse cannot give you its nose before you mount, you do not have enough control to be climbing on yet.
Step 9: Put Only Your Toes in the Stirrup
Put only the tip of your toe or the ball of your foot in the stirrup. Do not shove your foot deep. If something goes wrong, you need to get out quickly. Getting hung up in the stirrup on the first mount is not a little problem.
Step 10: Lift Yourself Slightly, Then Come Back Down
Pull yourself up just enough for the horse to feel your weight. Do not swing your leg over yet. Go up a little, then come back down. Repeat this several times. If the horse stands quietly, it gets release. If it moves, keep control of the nose and wait for stillness before you quit.
Step 11: Repeat from Both Sides
Do this from the left side and the right side. A horse can handle something on one side and still be worried about the other side. Teach both sides now instead of finding out later that one side was never prepared.
Step 12: Keep the Nose Bent and Fully Mount
When the horse feels calm and controlled, keep the nose bent toward you, then swing your leg over and sit down quietly. Do not release the nose just because your butt hit the saddle. Stay in control until the horse is standing and thinking.
Step 13: Get On and Off Repeatedly
Do not rush straight into riding forward. Get on, sit, get off. Repeat it. The horse needs to understand that mounting and dismounting are normal. The first win is not riding around the pen. The first win is the horse staying calm while you get on and off.
What Correct Looks Like
Correct looks like the horse standing quietly while the saddle moves, the stirrups flap, the horn is pulled on, and weight is added. The horse may look, shift, or think, but it should not be trying to leave, buck, or explode.
When you put your foot in the stirrup and lift yourself, the horse should stay bent, controlled, and thinking. When you fully mount, the horse should stand still long enough for you to sit quietly and stay organized.
Correct does not mean you got on once and survived. Correct means the horse is learning that the whole process is boring, safe, and not something to react to.
Common Mistakes
The first mistake is trying to get on before the horse accepts noise, movement, saddle shifting, and weight. That turns mounting into the first real test instead of the final step of preparation.
The second mistake is letting go of the reins or not keeping the nose bent. That is like climbing into a vehicle with no steering wheel and no brakes.
The third mistake is putting your foot too deep in the stirrup. If the horse moves, jumps, or spins, you need to be able to get out fast.
The fourth mistake is quitting when the horse moves. If the horse learns that moving makes the pressure stop, you may accidentally teach it to move every time you mount.
The fifth mistake is riding forward too soon. Mounting is its own lesson. Do not turn it into the first ride until the horse is calm with you getting on and off.
Safety Notes
Always keep your hands on the reins. You need steering and brakes before, during, and after mounting.
Work in a safe area with soft footing and no junk, panels, equipment, or sharp corners nearby. If the horse jumps sideways, you do not want it landing on something dangerous.
Use a second person if needed, but only if that person understands what is happening. A helper who holds the horse wrong, gets in the wrong spot, or panics can make things worse.
If the horse is bucking hard, rearing, striking, bolting, or you do not feel safe, stop and get experienced help. First mounting is not the place to prove how tough you are.
Final Thoughts
Mounting is not just climbing on. It is preparing the horse for every strange thing that happens before you are sitting in the saddle.
Move the saddle. Make noise. Add weight. Act a little ridiculous. Flex the nose. Put your foot in shallow. Lift yourself slowly. Get on and off until the horse realizes this whole thing is just another normal part of the job.
Confidence comes before movement. Do not rush forward just because you got on. The first goal is calm control. Riding comes after that.
Tools You’ll Need
- Saddle
- Bridle and reins
- Helmet
- Safe round pen or controlled arena
- Good flexion already taught
- Basic lunging already taught
- Patience
- Experienced help if needed