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Slant Horse Trailers for Sale: | ||||
Tip: Use the search box (left column) to find the proper part, accessory or aftermarket product.
Featherlite 3 horse slant load with dressing room |
- | $14,500.00 | 46m | ||
1998 Exiss Aluminum 4-Horse Slant Load Horse Trailer w Dressing Room AC Heater |
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$7,300.00 $10,795.00 |
2h 11m | |
2004 Calico Gooseneck 3 Horse Slant Trailer |
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$5,000.00 | 3h 32m | |
exiss 4 horse slant with living quarters |
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$17,000.00 | 18h 14m | |
2006 featherlite ( aluminum smooth skin) 4 horse slant load 6.8x22 and 7 tall |
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$15,300.00 $19,900.00 |
4d 2h 45m | |
2010 Platinum Coach 4 Horse Trailer Slant 17' LQ Living Quarters w Bunk Beds |
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$67,500.00 | 4d 2h 45m | |
2 horse slant livestock combo trailer with tack area |
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$3,695.00 | 4d 11h 30m | ||
Hawk 3 horse BP Slant custom trailer |
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- | $9,500.00 | 4d 19h 3m | |
02 Collin-Arndt 44' slant 3 horse with complete living quarters plus workshop |
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$1,000.00 $26,995.00 |
5d 3h | |
2002 4 Star 2 H Slant Load GN Trailer w Weekender Package |
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$500.00 $13,995.00 |
5d 6h 3m |
How to Train Your Horse To Trailer Load
If you're having trouble loading your horse, I strongly suggest the investment of $4.99 in my trailer-training course.
- Download and print from your home computer
- 5 days, 5 chapters
- Learn at your own pace
An excerpt from Trailer Training: An Easy guide to the Proven Methods of John Lyons:
We'll begin today with our trailer attached to a truck, parked on level ground, it's wheels blocked. Nothing is more frustrating than trying to teach a horse to load into a trailer that rocks as the horse steps up. If you want a lesson in exasperation, try it sometime. Our goal, of course, is to train our horse to load and unload under any circumstance. With practice your horse will get there – but a rocking and rolling trailer will drive you nuts with a trailering newbie.
For purposes of illustration, I'll be describing the process as if you're using a forward-loading, two-horse trailer – but the concepts remain the same regardless of your particular setup. Adaptation on your part will be a simple, common sense thing.
There are two schools of thought when it comes to teaching a horse to trailer. I've touched on them earlier. Both versions use some amount of the "Go Forward cue" as you've practiced it – but, specifically, they come down to this: In one version, (we'll call it "A") we primarily rely on the Go Forward cue – plus patience – to get the horse loaded. This is more often than not, the route I personally take (or a mix of both, frankly). The pro is, it takes less sweat on your part and does a better job of teaching the horse to unload, the con is, it can take much, much longer. When I trailer-train a horse I know it's going to take a large chunk of time and I resign myself to that. The alternate route ("B") is to motivate the horse using the exercises we practiced yesterday to teach him that life is a vacation in the trailer and nothing but hard work outside the trailer. In essence, the second method makes loading up the horse's idea. The pro is it can be much quicker. The con is, you've really gotta work.
Read more or purchase (read the reviews)
Other available courses include:
Stop Bucking (reviews)
Round Pen: First Steps (reviews)
Rein In Your Horse's Speed (For Owners of Nervous or Bolting Horses) (reviews)












