10 CapitalPress.com December 1, 2017 Workshops promote horse power By ALIYA HALL Capital Press DORENA, Ore. — While most farmers rely on tractors for help in the field, Walt Ber- nard of Ruby and Amber’s Farm trains draft horses to work for him. The certified organic and biodynamic farm is named after Bernard’s first crew of workhorses, and he said that us- ing workhorses on the farm is a further example of sustainable practices. “We farm with them be- cause they’re low-petroleum impact on the soil,” Bernard said. “Horses are a live power source, and you apply that the same way you’d apply a tractor to a business model, and you make that work within your system.” Now, he has eight draft horses working his land. Bernard and his wife, Kris, established the farm in 1999, and in 2001, after receiving multiple requests, Bernard be- gan teaching workshops on training horses and the people who want to drive them. Aliya Hall/For the Capital Press Walt Bernard and his intern, Anne Peterson, with draft horses they’re training for a client in California. In addition to training hors- es, Bernard offers workshops to train people to use workhorses on the farm. Bernard considers four vari- ables when training: • Do the teamsters have the skill set for what they want to do? • Do the horses have the ability to do what the teamster wants them to do? • Does the teamster have the right equipment? • How will the horse and teamster handle the uncontrol- lable things such as crowds, lightning strikes and hail- storms? “The process is basical- ly student-directed and stu- dent-driven,” Bernard said. “I start with the basics. I don’t make any assumptions. A lot of people come here with some horse experience and I treat them like they have none. We train with two goals in mind: keeping (teamsters) safe and teaching failsafe, secure things that are systems they can oper- ate in and be successful.” The workshops are $350 a person, with a six-person limit. Bernard said that he’s seeing more interest this year than last. Aliya Hall/For the Capital Press Walt Bernard has eight draft horses that help him on the farm. He also trains the horses — and people who want to farm with them. He attributes that to the sus- tainability culture and high fuel prices. Bernard starts students with well-broke horses, and he teaches them how to handle a horse safely, as well as recog- nizing the behavior and mental state of the animal. These skills will help the students connect Equine based farm learning program to drive a hitch of draft horses? Workshops • Teamster Training • Farm School workhorseworkshops.com Walt Bernard • 541-510-2359 walt@workhouseworkshops.com L17-2/100 L17-3/100 Want to with the horse and communi- cate with them by understand- ing what the equines are saying. The horse’s training is sim- ilar to the driver’s in regards to basic consistency. After being trained with cues, harness and reins, the trainee horses will work with the well-broke hors- es. Over time, the trainee horses will be worked together. “Each new task you have to take it easy at the start,” Ber- nard said. “If (the horses are) fearful, you have to go back and break it down more.” He describes the workshop as working on a bell curve, building up the level of stress before easing back. He said it’s important to build success. “I have a 90 percent rule,” Bernard said. “Unless I’m 90 percent sure they can do it, then I won’t let them try it. It keeps everyone feeling successful. You don’t want a loss of con- fidence for the humans and the horses. Horses are really sen- sitive to that. If you give them something too hard, they lose confidence. You have to break it down to more steps.” Bernard said he loves to train both horses and people. “There was very little men- torship when I started and very little training opportunities,” he said. “Mentorship is the num- ber one thing people can do to be successful.” His philosophy varies from older teamsters’. He said there wasn’t as big a focus on safety considerations in the past, and in this society teachers can’t af- ford to risk that. “They used to say the pri- mary thing is the horse. I look at it differently,” Bernard said. “The priority is human life and human safety, then the horse; it’s very close, but it’s second.” The core values of his phi- losophy include: patience, honesty, clear communication, present moment interaction, cooperation, graduated suc- cess takes priority over goals or time, safety, positive re- ward-based training, progres- sive desensitization and princi- ples of advance and retreat. “Complex problems can be reduced to simple steps for a positive solution” and “the horses’ perspective should be your perspective” are both mot- tos he includes on his website. Bernard said his philosophy comes from feedback, mentors and updating harsh old-school philosophies to make them hu- mane. “There’s nothing wrong with discipline, but it has to be something the horse under- stands,” he said. “It all comes ultimately from what the horse needs.” The most rewarding aspect for Bernard is having everyone feel confident. “For the horse, it’s doing the task. For the people we train, it’s seeing them going out and doing that, feeling successful,” he said. “It’s probably what makes me feel best. I think about it a lot, how can I make this person feel good and keep wanting to do it.”