charles wilhelm has become known as one of the country's top trainers for both horses and people his approach to training focuses on educating the horse owner alongside their equine partners so they can form a strong bond and achieve an amazing partnership the next thing i want to do is work on is what we call sentence okay that's when you saddle the horse and wants to turn around and bite you i show people how to do this all the time but no one wants to take the time they're so busy wanting to throw a saddle on and get to riding they never fix the darn thing and finally it can get so bad that i've seen him rare and buck and get really aggressive and we do this when we start colts we put a rope around their the girth area and and what we do is we pull on it a little bit and release and i once if the camera can see on both sides are these white spots that's from a bad fitting saddle this and it's not hard this is kind of a wide flat back horse it's a five-year-old horse eventually she'll get a few more withers get a little more height won't be as bad but that's why it's important that the saddle fits properly but that's also why horses get cranky when you cinch them up they get sore and they know what's coming so pull release pull release pull release pull release all right and you can do that where the rear sense would go some of this stuff just goes away because of preparation so ah look at that see i knew it was there because when when you first got this horse in we threw a saddle on it just to try it out and that rear cinch just touched her and she got a little rounded in the back she was fine on the front so there we go now in the rear sense we don't tighten them up like we do the front ones uh but it should be it can't it shouldn't be dangling down you know most time i see him as two or three inches down and even with my own staff otherwise why have a rear cinch all right now we can go a little further back towards the flank what if he was going up a hill and you didn't have a breast collar on your saddle slid back now i've been there see all right we'll let her go no big loss we're just going to put a longer lead on it keep us a little bit safer usually do this in the round pin sometimes you can do in this round pin keep them moving but i like to do it when we got them tied simulated being tied i'm going to tighten this up a little bit i'm just putting steady pressure there brought his head in relaxed and then i released always looking for something positive we hope you've enjoyed watching charles wilhelm's ultimate foundation horsemanship remember to find out more about charles and to see how you can get the most out of your relationship with your horse visit charles online at charleswillhelm.com