Stop, Turn In, and Reconnect on the Lunge Line
Tools You’ll Need
- Rope halter
- Lunge line
- Training whip
- Gloves
- Safe enclosed area
- Basic lunging foundation
If a horse won’t stop when lunging, it usually hasn’t learned how to come back to you—it has only learned how to go.
What’s Really Going On
What We’re Actually Teaching
When a horse keeps running, pulling away, or ignoring “whoa,” the problem is not speed. The problem is understanding. The horse does not yet know that stopping means coming back mentally and physically to the handler.
Horses naturally move away from pressure. If all the horse has learned is to go forward in a circle, it will stay out there, disconnected, and continue moving. Pulling on the line or trying to force a stop often creates more resistance instead of understanding.
What we are really teaching is not just stopping. We are teaching the horse to redirect its feet, bring its attention back, and find rest with the handler. The horse wins by finding that place of rest.
This is where the concept of Tuck the Tush comes in. This is not just a phrase—it is the moment the horse begins to think instead of react.
The Key Concept: Tuck the Tush
Tuck the Tush means asking the horse to roll or move its hindquarters away, turn in, give you both eyes, and put its full attention back on you.
When done correctly, the horse will stop leaving mentally, face you, and often begin licking its lips as it starts thinking through the situation. This is the shift from reacting to understanding.
“Whoa” does not just mean stop moving. It means redirect the feet, turn in, and reconnect.
How to Fix It
Step 1: Keep the Horse Moving
Start by lunging the horse forward. Do not focus on stopping yet. The horse must be moving so you have something to redirect.
Step 2: Do Not Pull Straight Back
Pulling directly on the line often causes the horse to brace or pull away. Instead of fighting forward motion, redirect the hindquarters.
Step 3: Ask for Tuck the Tush
Apply pressure toward the hindquarters using your body position or training whip. Ask the horse to move its hip away and begin turning in toward you.
Step 4: Look for Two Eyes
The moment the horse turns in and gives you both eyes, release the pressure. This is the correct answer.
Step 5: Allow Rest Facing You
Let the horse stand, relax, and think. This is where the horse learns that coming in and focusing on you is the place of rest.
Step 6: Repeat Until It Becomes the Answer
Send the horse back out and repeat. Over time, the horse will begin choosing to turn in and stop instead of running through pressure.
What Correct Looks Like
The horse starts giving you the answer with less pressure, less confusion, and less argument. You should see the horse think through the pressure instead of fighting, guessing, or leaving mentally.
Common Mistakes
The biggest mistake is rushing the lesson, increasing pressure without a clear release, or trying to fix the whole horse in one session. Reward the smallest correct try, then build from there.
Tools Used in This Lesson
- Rope halter
- Lunge line
- Training whip
- Gloves
- Safe enclosed area
- Basic lunging foundation
Where This Fits Next
Next: Stop and Change Direction While Lunging.