honetpot
Well-Known Member
I think realistic.I think some of you need to wind your necks in a bit. Some responses on here are really quite shocking!
Equines are herd animals, they form social bonds that help protect themsleves. If you see two resting , there is often one guard, and a more experienced pony, who may not appear dominant will often lead that little group. When you move a pony out a group, it has to rely on its self for defense so becomes more alert. You nice paddock or stable which to you seems safe is just something that prevents them from either seeing or running away from danger. Put a pony in an established group, it will try and make a space in that group. Mares are often herd leaders and a gelding trying to establish it self may fight or mount it, its not a about reproduction, its more about showing, not dominance, that is too crude a word, social standing.
By continuing to change the 'herd' , its a bit like changing school class mates in a new school, it never gets to settle, and although it may not look stressed to you, it will be, and more alert. A good judge is muscle tone, tension shows the fear, fight reflex, and facial expression long before they do anything.
I buy young animals that often have had several homes, and buy them cheap because the are a ''problem', they are not, the 'naughtier' they are the more they are isolated on a yard. The easiest solution is to turn them out with a new friend in a strange to both of them paddock with a bit of grass, and just let them be. Even better if the companion pony is well educated to stable life, and let the new pony learn from them, and bring them in as a couple. When they are them added together a larger group they have a buddy, at their back. I have never known this not to work.
You can never really change a horse, you just become more expert at avoiding or working around a problem, until its not a problem.