Show Jumping Trainers in OC charge around 500- 1200 a month for full training for one horse. Multiply that by the number of horses in their barn they're training and your set.
Unless you want to add the pro rates at shows, percentages they make selling or buying horses for clients, and extra costs and subtract from their own horses.
That should give you an adequate amount.
The starting salary for a horse trainer is $31,650.
well horse trainers earn up to $100-$200 dollars per hour
The Annual Salary for a horse trainer depends on the country you are in, if you are self employed or the size of the company you work for, your experience, and what area you are in(for example in Ontario if you are up north or in areas away from the main cities like Orillia, the pay will be lower, but the more built up an area such as in Missisauga and Oakville near Toronto, the pay will be higher.)
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Horse keeping in any area of NYC is fairly expensive and you'll likely spend in excess of $10,000 a year per horse, this does not include cost for special shoeing needs, or any kind of showing expenses, lessons, or a trainer. This is just basic board and basic needs of the horse.
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Well, it depends. Different places charge different amounts, depends if it's staying a their stable or the trainer will come to you, and how often they will train your horse. I would call local stables and ask around. I have paid $350 a month for a good trainer come to my farm 4 days a week and work with one horse. I have also paid $1000 a month for a horse to be at a "show barn" with a nationally known trainer. Shows are extra $$.
As an entry level trainer, a walrus trainer will earn anywhere from $18,000-$20,000 annually. However, animal trainers can get promotions and move up on the pay scale.
you usually get exactly what you pay for. Younger inexperienced trainers (not including feed and board) will run $200 and up Very good, well known successful trainers can get in the $1,500 to $2,500 range
The underlying principle is operant conditioning. The horse is made to move until winded and it wants to stop. When it stops, it must tolerate being in the trainer's proximity. If it does not, then it is made to move again. Therefore, the horse (usually) figures out for itself that it will be more comfortable to stand still and accept the presence of the human than to become more tired by running in circles as an attempt to escape. It is possible to use this method in an abusive manner if the trainer does not pay very close attention to the horse's physical state, and if the trainer does not "reward the slightest try" by backing off on the pressure for the horse to move. It is possible for a horse to become injured by overwork, or it may attempt to climb out of the pen, or injure its legs on the hardware of the pen, if it is pressured to move with too much urgency. The round penning technique is not really a "horse training" method so much as it is a "horse taming" method. There are a few horses that are so nervous and sensitive that the method may be ineffective. The effectiveness of the method actually has nothing to do with "love." With this horse taming method, the horse is not motivated by receiving love from the trainer. The horse is motivated by receiving relief from pressure (being allowed to stand still to catch its breath). Eventually, most horses will learn that being near the trainer is a "safe" place to be. Outwardly, the resulting behavior may give the appearance of "love," but that would be an anthropomorphic interpretation.
Without knowing your riding level and experience and how much training your horse already has it is impossible to know where to start. Training a horse is a long process that can be dangerous for the inexperienced. If you can't afford to pay a trainer rent or buy some basic training DVDs. Go to a bookstore or library and get some books on basic training. It sounds like your horse is a bit green and he now needs some hours to smooth him out a little. But is is so difficult to explain the training he will need if I can't see the horse. Schooling a horse is very individualized. And not all methods work for every horse. That's part of being a trainer. You have to find what works for your horse. But training at it's most basic is correct riding. You have to be a correct rider and you have to 'ask' the horse correctly to get the desired results.
pay scale of sports trainer?
when i was training my hours were never set, i worked in my own time. you can't put a time limit on training a horse, because they are all different and some are easier than others. i set my own hours, sometimes i finished at 4pm, sometimes not til well after dark, it all depends on how much you need to do and how fast you want to go.