happy-appy
Member
I very rarely post on H &H although would like to share what has to one of my strangest horsey moments!
One of my horses shares his stable with some nesting white doves (beautiful but messy damn things who moved in from the farm next door!). One of the young fledglings has been out on the yard for the last couple of days being fed by its parents and growing up. I have kept an eye on it and provided it with a pallet for some extra cover. Sadly, I went out to the stables this morning and the fledgling had disappeared ..only a couple of white feathers remained ..I put this down to a cat/fox/whatever.
I turned out the horses, then mucked out, and then decided to go back into the field to poo-pick and enjoy the sun. As I went back to the field with my barrow..one of horses began trying to get my attention with frantic 'nods'. This was not a horsey invitation to play, this seemed more intense. I have only seen this in horses 3 times in my life..(having spent most of my 50 plus years with horses!) and each time was in an 'urgent' circumstance (when a horse close to another had been pts, when a horse was worried by a helicopter flying low over his field, and when a horse had been very frightened by a trip away to a 'rough' so called trainer).
Anyhow, the nodding certainly caught me attention and I went to him. He looked from me to the sky and stared and then looked at me and continued to 'nod' and then looked up at the sky again. Looking up there were two buzzards circling, and unusually they seemed to be hunting in a pair. There are alpacas and lambs in the next field and the alpacas then also began making distress calls and running in to protect the lambs.
I watched the buzzards as they hunted the flock of doves..who were flying in panic...and then realised that this was why my horse was upset. The doves are his stable mates and his friends! His friends were being taken ...and he needed to tell me! (I am guessing that the fledgling may have been buzzard breakfast).
Anyhow I returned to the yard to open top stable doors to provide as much cover fore the doves as poss...and also put the dogs in the garden to try and deter the buzzards. The buzzards are nesting in a wood at the top of my field and keen on feeding their chicks right now I should imagine.
If any ethologists, horse behaviourists, animal communicators or those with any similar experiences would like to comment, I would love to hear your thoughts!
Strange but true ..and don't know where else to post this!
Thank you
One of my horses shares his stable with some nesting white doves (beautiful but messy damn things who moved in from the farm next door!). One of the young fledglings has been out on the yard for the last couple of days being fed by its parents and growing up. I have kept an eye on it and provided it with a pallet for some extra cover. Sadly, I went out to the stables this morning and the fledgling had disappeared ..only a couple of white feathers remained ..I put this down to a cat/fox/whatever.
I turned out the horses, then mucked out, and then decided to go back into the field to poo-pick and enjoy the sun. As I went back to the field with my barrow..one of horses began trying to get my attention with frantic 'nods'. This was not a horsey invitation to play, this seemed more intense. I have only seen this in horses 3 times in my life..(having spent most of my 50 plus years with horses!) and each time was in an 'urgent' circumstance (when a horse close to another had been pts, when a horse was worried by a helicopter flying low over his field, and when a horse had been very frightened by a trip away to a 'rough' so called trainer).
Anyhow, the nodding certainly caught me attention and I went to him. He looked from me to the sky and stared and then looked at me and continued to 'nod' and then looked up at the sky again. Looking up there were two buzzards circling, and unusually they seemed to be hunting in a pair. There are alpacas and lambs in the next field and the alpacas then also began making distress calls and running in to protect the lambs.
I watched the buzzards as they hunted the flock of doves..who were flying in panic...and then realised that this was why my horse was upset. The doves are his stable mates and his friends! His friends were being taken ...and he needed to tell me! (I am guessing that the fledgling may have been buzzard breakfast).
Anyhow I returned to the yard to open top stable doors to provide as much cover fore the doves as poss...and also put the dogs in the garden to try and deter the buzzards. The buzzards are nesting in a wood at the top of my field and keen on feeding their chicks right now I should imagine.
If any ethologists, horse behaviourists, animal communicators or those with any similar experiences would like to comment, I would love to hear your thoughts!
Strange but true ..and don't know where else to post this!
Thank you