How to use a training logbook for your horse

A training diary can be a valuable tool in achieving your training goals if you know how. A logbook is not \’just a diary\’ where you describe what you did that day. In order to get the most out of your training diary keep these tips in mind.

Purpose of journaling
The reason to keep a logbook is to keep track of your achievements and learn from it. Therefor you need to write down your goal(s) and your progress. If you don\’t write these down, it is hard to remember them correctly. You can get the feeling of \’never achieving\’ because your mind will adjust your goals and your achievements like a horizon. You will never arrive… As soon as you write some of your goals down, your subconcious will start looking for ways to get there. Keeping a logbook can help you keep motivated.

Learn from experience
If you want to learn as much as possible from your experience you have to be honest and write down the things that you can learn from.

Keep it positive
Practice writing everything down in a positive way, so it is nice to read back. Instead of writing down \’I was impatient and lost my temper\’ phrase it like this \’I became frustrated because my steps were too big. My horse didn\’t understand what I wanted and I became impatient.\’

In this way you will find a solution to handle the situation in the future: you \’lumped\’ your criteria. Next time you can decide to stop your training and take a moment to figure out how to \’split\’ the criteria in smaller steps or adjust the context of training so your horse will understand quicker what you want. In this way you set yourself and your horse up for success.

Read here to read 4 easy ways to start a  training journal (opens in a new window).

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Lessons learned
It is also a valuable to write down all the things that went right. This makes you aware of the lessons you\’ve are already learned. It also makes you aware of your strengths as a trainer. After updating your logbook for a while you will see a pattern: the points of learning have turned into things that went right. This is very motivating.

Keep it balanced
Make sure the points for improvement are not outbalancing the things that went right. We all have the tendency to focus too much on things that went \’wrong\’, but that won\’t help you form a realistic picture of you as a trainer. There are always a lot of thing you have already mastered. They are important, too.

If you write down three things to change in your next training, also write down three things you are content about. This may feel uneasy to you in the beginning, but positive reinforcement is all about focusing on the things that go (in the) right (direction), in order to get more of it.

You can also split it between the things your horse did well and the things you, as trainer, did well. Example: \’my horse was interested in my training for half an hour\’, \’my horse made progress in exercise X\’, \’I have set my horse up to succeed by keeping my criteria clear\’, \’I kept my training sessions short and sweet by counting the treats in my pocket before I started\’.

Goals achieved
Celebrate achieving your goals: make a picture or video to remember, share it with friends, your coach or your accountability partner. Enjoy your achievements big and small!

Timeline
A training diary also helps you to keep track of your timeline and practice hours. Did it take as long as you expected? You can write how long your training sessions are. Maybe you are used to thinking in \’weeks or months\’ to achieve something, I think it is more useful and realistic to think in the amount of training sessions or training days.

Example: Instead of \’It took me 3 months to teach my horse to lift his legs for the farrier\’ a logbook can help you see \’it took 12 weeks: each week we practiced 4 days. Each day consisted out of 5 training sessions of 6 minutes max.\’ Now you know you only practiced 28 days (not three months/ 90 days) and each day you practiced a maximum of 30 minutes a day. The training took 14 hours in total to achieve your goal. That sounds different than \’three months\’, right?

\"\"A training diary is all about making yourself conscious. Keep it motivating and phrase things in a positive way so it will be pleasant to read back.

Tell me about your training logbook!

Here is the clicker training logbook I use and give away for FREE:

Free Clicker Training Logbook – Pdf file: free_training-logbook-made-by-hippologic-2016

NOTE: I made this training journal template in 2016. I am always learning and shaping my training methods. I would like to change:

  • Name 3 points that went well in training and
  • only 1 point of improvement to focus on next training.
  • Phrase it positively and
  • focus on what you want to happen (not on what you don\’t want to see more of).

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Sandra Poppema, B.Sc.
I help horse owners get the results in training they really, really want with joy and easy for both horse and human. I always aim for win-win!
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3 thoughts on “How to use a training logbook for your horse”

  1. Pingback: 4 Easy Ways to Start a Training Journal | Hippologic's Horse Training

  2. Pingback: How to Keep Track of Your Training (the easy way!) | HippoLogic

  3. Reblogged this on HippoLogic and commented:

    would love to see every horse owner that wants to improve his or her skills to use a training logbook. It is a tool that is very underestimated. Try it for a month and let me know what you’ve learned!

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