by Dominic Jesse
here was a time when horse trainer Monty Roberts was controversial.
Instead of whipping horses into submission, hed get touchy-feely
with the animals using a method he calls joining up. Now, Roberts
is an equestrian legend, a man who served as loose model for an
upcoming feature film starring Robert Redford. Hes sold more
than 600,000 copies of his autobiography, The Man Who Listens
To Horses, and hes now spreading the word across the world with
his 1998 Join Up Tour.
On Friday, April 24th, and Saturday, April 25th, Roberts will demonstrate his unique way of training horses at the Circle G Showcase in Olive Branch, Mississippi. He will also sign copies of his book, still on the New York Times nonfiction bestseller list, at noon on Friday, April 24th, at the Deliberate Literate on Union Avenue.
Roberts started to develop his method of joining up horses while
tracking wild mustangs in the deserts of Nevada. Like an anthropologist,
he spent nights watching the wild horses interact. He observed
the silent body language of the animals to determine how the horses
controlled each other. Watching a mare discipline a colt, he noticed
the fundamentals of horse behavior. To get a horse to approach
you, he found, it is best to simply turn your back on the horse
and wait for it to come to you. Staring at the horse makes it
run away. Giving the horse a slight glance while your back is
turned encourages it to come to you, to join up with the trainer
as it would with a herd. Today, Roberts uses about 100 different
gestures during this process.
PHOTO BY CHRISTOPHER DYDYK

Considered a child prodigy by some, Roberts began working with horses at a young age. By age 5, he was working for Warner Bros., including a stint as a stunt double for Elizabeth Taylor in National Velvet. In 1955, while working on East of Eden, he trained James Dean in the way of the lasso.
When he was a boy, Roberts says, his horse-trainer father would break his charges by tying them to a post, covering them in a tarpaulin, and binding their legs together. This method of training worked by restricting a horses movement over several weeks, thereby breaking the horses spirit.
At age 8, Roberts watched his father, also a police officer, beat a robbery suspect into a pulp. After lying in the station for two days with a cracked skull, torn lungs, and no medical attention, the suspect died.
And finally, when young Roberts demonstrated his new method of horse training to his father, he was whipped with a chain and spent several days in the hospital. Afterwards, he claims, the beatings occurred about once a week for three years almost as if his own father was trying to break his sons spirit as he did with his horses.
But in the end, the elder Roberts failed. Today, Roberts is one of the highest-regarded horse trainers in the world.
Until 1986, Roberts kept his methods underground because of the widespread fear that any horse not broken by conventional means might hurt a rider. Since then, however, recognition through his book, TV reports and documentaries by the BBC and PBS is spreading his practice across the world. In 1989, he visited England, where, in front of Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip, and the queen mother, he tamed the queen mothers filly within half an hour.
In addition, Roberts and his wife, Pat, have fostered 47 other children over the years, along with their three biological children. Most of these kids come from disadvantaged, urban, and abusive backgrounds the type of kids he once worked with while studying psychology at the California Polytechnic State University.
According to his wife, there are similarities between Roberts child-rearing philosophy and his work with horses. You cant tell a child they must-do, she says. You must instill in them the want-to.
Its an approach thats worked for both man and beast. n