Quick answer: When a good horse gets sour, ask what changed in workload, tack, comfort, turnout, rider pressure, environment, or expectations before calling it attitude.
Good horses do not usually wake up sour for no reason. Something changed, or something has been building.
Look back two weeks
Sourness often starts before the rider notices. Workload, repetition, travel, soreness, and pressure all add up.
Too much repetition can make a willing horse resentful.
Tack, feet, teeth, body soreness, and recovery all matter.
Do not keep asking the same thing that created the problem.
Real Rider Resource takeaway
Sour is not a label. It is a signal. Real riders read the signal before they punish the horse for giving it.
Is sour behavior always pain?
No. It can be workload, boredom, confusion, pressure, pain, or environment. The pattern matters.
When should I get help?
Get help when sour behavior becomes dangerous, sudden, paired with pain signs, or does not improve with fair changes.
This article is general riding education and is not veterinary or professional training advice.


