John Lyons Clinic at Equine Affaire
John Lyons is a well known clinician and horse trainer, especially in the western stock horse world. He has been active in the horse show community for many, many years and has won numerous accolades and awards for his riding and teaching abilities. I was very excited to see the number of John Lyons clinics offered at the Equine Affaire this year. His “U-Pick” system of training provides a number of exercises geared toward a particular goal and the rider can choose which exercises appeal to and work for each horse. In addition, each exercise has a few variations that can provide varying levels of challenge as the horse progresses. There were a number of Lyons clinics I was interested in seeing, including ones for developing better control, controlling speed, and improved stopping. The first one we made it to was the speed control clinic.
The arena was packed with spectators, and seating was tough to find. We were lucky to have some folks offer us their seats as they left and we got front row. The one hour and fifteen minute clinic began with John coming out and talking a bit about his experience and then introducing the three men that were on horses riding around the arena. It turns out that they were not “students” as in most clinics we watched – they were John’s two sons Josh and Michael, and a man that began the Lyons training certification many years ago. John proceeded to talk about the unnatural manner in which we ask horses to remain collected and illustrated his points with a horse he led around as he spoke. During the entire monologue, his two sons were mounted on horses and were riding around the arena behind him doing their own things. It sort of looked like a warm up arena at a show, with John Lyons wandering around in the midle with a microphone. To say it was a bit distracting would be an understatement.
Finally John mounted up and the exercises for speed control began. The first one he chose to talk about was doing a directional change – as you walk around the arena and your horse increases speed, stop and do a 180 degree turn and walk off in the other direction. Each time your horse speeds up, change direction. Simple enough, right? Well, it felt like he spent fifteen minutes discussing this exercise, how to increase the difficulty (change gait), or include variety (turn on forehand versus hind). The whole time he talked, his sons were riding around the arena doing their own thing – reining spins, loping, lead changing. Finally he finished and moved on to Exercise #2, one of Josh’s choosing. Unfortunately, Josh did not have a microphone and so John had to translate everything he said to the audience. This one involved spiraling off into smaller circles if the horse speeds up; however there was some confusion as to how the exercise began. At one point John seemed to be indicating that the rider should hum to the horse to slow it down. I found the lack of microphone to be particularly troublesome, as Josh would lope off to demonstrate the exercise, but the audience was unable to have it narrated as it happened. Once again, the other son was off doing his own thing, adding to the chaos. I also felt that John wasn’t clearly explaining his techniques to the audience. Maybe someone that has completed his video series would have understood him better, but I found instructions such as “Move his tail back” unclear and confusing. This scene repeated for the first four exercises, but eventually I felt that the clinic was not serving the purpose I’d hoped it would and we left.
In summary, this clinic was not well organized. All three riders should have had microphones, or at the very least, the one demonstrating the exercises should have been narrating. All the riders should have been demonstrating the exercises being discussed or they should have been waiting quietly for their turn, in my opinion. All the activity had the effect of appearing chaotic and was a distraction to the exercises at hand. Finally, I felt that the demonstration was very commercial. In his defense, I had that same feeling at several of the clinics we went to and it’s a feeling I don’t recall having had at previous Affaires. There was a lot of self promotion of the Lyons name and product line, and I felt that took away from the point of the clinic. I would have liked to see students participate and learn the exercises with the audience, so we could grasp what issues the horses may come up with. The exercises were that were provided were useful, albeit a bit basic for my own riding level, but a good refresher. All in all, there was some good information there but I had higher expectations from a clinician of his caliber.





juliette - April 21, 2010 at 7:39 am
Good review. I like that you were so honest about what you saw. That is disappointing. People need to learn that doing something well is self-promotion enough…there is no need to keep repeating the product line.
Arlene-travelcloseup - April 21, 2010 at 1:39 pm
It is too bad this didn’t live up to the billing. But you did a great job reviewing it.
michelle - April 22, 2010 at 7:39 am
Julie, I was disappointed. I like John Lyons and it just didn’t seem like it used to. Like I said though, there was a very commercialized aspect to many of the demos I saw and in some cases it seemed like the clinic was a teaser to get you to buy the book/DVD set/gear. But I still learned a lot and had a great time!
Arlene, thanks for the support. Don’t get me wrong, it wasn’t a BAD clinic, just not what you’d expect from that caliber trainer.
Carol - May 24, 2011 at 9:19 am
Great review, and even though this is an older review, I just had to add my opinion. I think in recent years that John Lyons, who is an excellent trainer, and his clinics have become far too commercialized. Back in 1993 I went to one of his clinics where he was the only one there, and over a two day clinic he took 4 problem horses he had never seen before and worked them in the round pen explaining what he was doing. It was excellent! After speaking highly of him and his clinic for years to my husband and some friends, we went to one of his clinics in about 2004. It felt like he was a different John Lyons! It was so commercialized and so boring—-what he said in 30 minutes could have been said in 10 and it seemed to just be a push to buy his DVDs and products. During the break, my husband asked him a question and he blew him off, did not give an adequate answer and said in so many words that to get an answer we need to buy one of his DVDs! The clinic was so boring we left before it was over! It is too bad that he has become a victim of his own success because back 11 years ago he and his clinics were excellent and it is too bad he is not still the same as he was then!
michelle - May 25, 2011 at 8:15 am
Carol, I am in 100% agreement with you! I was shocked and disappointed at this clinic for the same reasons you described. It is too bad, and he’s not alone. I’ve seen a number of great trainers become too commercialized and lose focus. One on hand I commend them for their business savvy, but they need to remember what put them in the public eye in the first place – their horse savvy.