“Sir
William,” or Bill, grew up in
New York’s Southern Tier, in the small town of Cohocton,
near the towns of Bath, Wayland, Dansville, and
Hornell.
He can’t remember any life without horses, starting to ride
almost before he learned to walk.
When he was between the ages of 8 and 10 years old,
Bill would ride his bicycle 3 & ½ miles uphill to a large
wooded pasture where his family owned and kept 28
ponies….five of which were “broke.”
Unfortunately, Bill didn’t know which five were the
“broke” ponies, but by the time he finished his daily
walking down, catching, and riding a pony every day over
many months, all 28 wild ponies were “broke to ride.”
As a
teenager, Bill rode in rodeos, back yard shows, and worked
year round at a “Dude Ranch.”
In the mid 1970’s he attended SUNY Alfred’s Equine
Science program, where one of the instructors said to him,
“perhaps you ought to be teaching the class their riding
skills…you most certainly know more than I do.”
And it was probably true.
Bill continued to sharpen his training skills, and
over the years was found competing at NRHA events and AQHA
shows, often winning over well-known trainers.
He was a Yankee
Reining Horse Association Reserve Non-Pro Champion on a
good, honest, little Quarter Horse named, ‘Jazz,” that he
often rode “bridleless” during Reining exhibitions long
before the advent of the NRHA Freestyle Reining classes.

Bill kept up
with the best of the horsemen, reading voraciously training
articles in magazines, going to clinics, seminars, and
exhibitions…anywhere that professional horsemen gathered to
talk about horses and training methods.
He spent many hours watching and talking with such
Reining greats as Bob Loomis, Dick Pieper, Bob Anthony, and
Al Dunning…Not to mention the infamous Bill Horn, who in the
1980’s once offered Bill the opportunity to come and ride
reining horses with him as an apprentice trainer.
Unfortunately, personal tragedy coupled with sudden
lifestyle changes, including the custody of two young sons,
prevented Bill from realizing his dream at that time.
According
to Bill, though, it was not World Champion professional
horsemen that taught him the most.
Two mentors early
in his life were instrumental in developing his highly tuned
horsemanship skills.
One was his local 4-H Leader, Harold “Tootie” Plain,
a retired US Cavalryman, and trainer of some of this
country’s earliest Western Pleasure horses.
The second was a big Buckskin mare named “Talis,” who
stepped off a truck out of
Oklahoma .
To this day, Bill doesn’t know the mare’s breeding,
or where exactly she was raised and trained, but he credits
that great mare with teaching him more about horses that
just about anybody, or anything he can think of.
“She did it all,” he says, remembering the multitude
of events he and that mare excelled at.
“She was a nobody, from nowhere, but she was truly a
great horse…One of the best there ever was…She showed me
everything.”
Over the
years, Bill’s training and riding style changed from that of
a physical “yahoo cowboy” just ramming and jamming to that
of a gifted horseman and trainer, who is able to read a
horse’s mind so well that he is still often called upon by
horse “traders” and other trainers to try out newly
purchased horses of unknown back grounds.
It takes a lot of knowledge and skill to step up on a
horse that may or may not be “broke,” or may or may not have
a multitude of dangerous habits lurking….and it’s too late
once aboard to decline the ride.
To this day, he is called upon to “fix” problem
horses, not only by individuals who have a horse with bad
habits, but also by owners who have had their horses develop
problems while being in training with other “professional”
trainers.

Over time,
Bill’s expertise developed toward Reining horses, but his
repertoire of knowledge keeps him turning out some
exceptional Western Pleasure horses, and fantastic Trail
horses, too.
His training program embodies the K.I.S.S. method (“keep it
simple, stupid”), using an “open the door, close the door”
philosophy, and the dressage principle of “elbow to the
bit.” He is
often heard remarking to his students, “who is smarter, you
or the horse?”
And he tells his clients and students, “You can’t dominate a
horse physically…You have to get into their minds…It’s a
human mind over a horse’s mind.”
According to Bill, there is no “cookie cutter” way to
train a horse.
You must be “intuitive”…In other words, “put your book down,
and read your horse!”
Truly, his methods work for both English and Western
riders, with his students bringing home a multitude of High
Point Year End Championships on various show circuits
throughout New York
.
Bill’s
training program keeps young horses minds fresh.
Yes, he does use an arena to start a colt, but most
of Bill’s training from novice horse to finished expert is
spent by riding horses miles and miles outside in a natural
environment, using a roadway in a field to perfect leg
yields, bending, and two-tracking.
A flat hay field works for loping and perfecting
circles, both small and large.
Bill doesn’t rely on
walls to help teach a horse how to “stay on the rail.”
His horses learn his body movement and leg cues for
shoulder and hindquarter movements, and develop suppleness
going over, under, around, and through natural obstacles on
the trail.
Bill’s tip to clients with horses in training is, “Horses
get broke by riding miles outdoors, not round and round in a
ring...Train and ride by that rule, and your horse will
always have a fresh mind, and never go sour.”
Bill’s
philosophy that “no horse needs a stronger bit, the rider
just needs better hands,” and his belief that the rider must
be “as kind as possible, yet only as firm as necessary” has
led him to
often tell a student to “leave your spurs at home.”
Ask simply, reinforce kindly, and spend time “reading
your horse” are basic principles that Bill uses in helping
his students, and clients, develop successful and long
lasting relationships with their horses.

Over the
last 50 years, Bill quietly perfected his trade,
He is presently the resident Trainer at Anderson
Quarter Horses in Cohocton, NY, where he also keeps a string
of outside horses in training, and gives riding lessons to
not only beginners in the saddle, but also expert riders who
wish to reach a higher performance peak with their horses.
For further information to
book a horse in training, or schedule a lesson, you may
reach
William T. Hamilton, Trainer
& Professional Horseman, at 585-919-9723.