More than 30 Treats Ideas for Clicker Training Your Horse

Are you curious what other people use as reinforcers (food rewards) in their horse training?

I like dry, chunky reinforcers that are easy to feed and keep my pockets fairly clean.

‘Dry’ foods are easy to use

Choosing the right reinforcer: don’t be afraid to test and change
  • Alfalfa pellets
  • Grass pellets
  • Alfalfa cubes*)
  • Timothy cubes*)
  • Timothy/Alfalfa cubes*)
  • Chaff
  • Carob
  • Oats
  • Black sunflower seeds (high calorie! Can be mixed in with lower value pellets or hay cubes)
  • Home baked treats
  • All commercial dinner pellets/dinner grain (nutritious and low sugar in comparison with commercial treats)

*) Warning: Pay attention to the hardness of the cubes. Cubes can be dangerous: some cubes are really hard and need to be soaked first. Another problem can arise when horses don’t chew the cubes. Some horses choke easily. You can test the hardness by breaking them hand. Other cubes are so dry and concentrated they become very voluptuous when hydrated in their stomach. Therefor horses can become thirsty in training.

Freshly plucked grass can be a really good reinforcer

Dry foods, but slower to deliver

  • Handful of fresh grass
  • Bunch of dandelions leaves
  • Handful of hay
  • Thistles (Kyra likes the flowers and leaves)
  • Blackberry leaves

Moist (and usually a bit more messy) reinforcers are:

  • Carrots
  • Winter carrot: sticks or chunks (not slices!)
  • Apple pieces
  • Pear pieces
  • Banana
  • Cucumber
  • Celery

Other reinforcers that you can use are:

Messy but good value and healthy

\"Some
Soaked beet pulp or dinner grain make good reinforcers
  • Soaked beet pulp
  • Wet bran
  • Other dinner mashes

Unhealthy treats (usually high value)

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Some people use Cheerios to train their horse
  • Cheerios (even ‘low sugar’ ones) and other breakfast cereal
  • Commercial horse treats (usually loaded with molasses/sugar)
  • Tic Tacs (small, which can be good and strong taste)
  • Mints
  • Sugar cubes

High value vs low value

The choice of reinforcer depends on the horse, time of year and behaviour I train. Sometimes The choice of reinforcer is just based on a practical reason: what do I have?

I always aim for the lowest value reinforcer. This might sound cheap, but the lowest value is still high enough to keep the horse engaged and willing to work. In other words: as long as your horse still likes it, you can use it in training.

It’s easy to go from low to medium and high value, but going down in value can be risky. I usually use food that is meant as ‘dinner’ for horses: cheap (it comes in 15-20 kg bags), healthy (balanced nutrition value) and handy (dry, easy to hand feed).

What do you use? Do you have tips that I can add here? Share them in the comments.

More about Using Treats in Training:

Train Your Horse to be Safe around Food and Food Rewards

The value of your rewards

3 Tips for treats in Training

3 thoughts on “More than 30 Treats Ideas for Clicker Training Your Horse”

  1. Pingback: Things to Consider Using Treats in (Clicker) Training Horses | Clicker Training

  2. I use leftover dried up bread – mainly not wheat bread but all kinds of different sorts, oats or rye or what not. I think it is best to cut the bread into cubes when it has gone stale and then let it dry completely. It will leave breadcrumbs in your pocket though.

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