Poneetee
New User
Hello,
At what point is putting an aggressive horse PTS your option?
12YO gelding- always being fiesty on the ground and has always been aggressive - kicking, biting, striking and lunging/charging towards although the behaviour is unpredictable. Some days he’s an angel, amazing to handle but then some days he just switches and is a complete different horse. I could be leading him in from the field and he would randomly pin his ears back rear up and lunge down towards me with his teeth.
I’ve come to learn to read his expressions well which is how I’ve managed to stay safe, I can tell normally on certain days if he is worth attempting to handle or not and some days it’s just not worth the risk.
He has been checked by the vet/chiropractor/physio/vet. Saddle has also been checked although he is generally good under the saddle (was a vertical rearer as a youngster but rarely does this now unless excited or fizzed up).
I’ve gone back to basic ground work numerous times and tried to start at the start and had a many instructors come out in the past to help including natural horsemanship which defiantly works best for him and it has helped improved his groundwork in the school slightly but he always has days where he switches and is unsafe and unpredictable to handle and I’m struggling to find a trainer that can go much further with him as he’s at a point now that he doesn’t want to be pushed any further. If you push him too for he just switches again.
I now have a 1 year old little boy and struggling to manage my gelding behaviour whilst having a baby as his behaviour is starting to get more dangerous. I can’t risk selling him on or loaning as this would be irresponsible but at the same time it’s being increasing unsafe for me to handle him.
I have the vet coming out next week to have a check over him again and discuss possibly looking to see if he has any ulcers but I’m really at lost end on what to do.
Would ulcers cause such aggressive behaviour randomly and just towards humans? He is fine towards other horses and never lashes out at them, if anything he is always at the bottom of the pecking order. Is there anything else that could potentially be causing this, or could it be that he is just a well dominated horse?
there is no abuse/neglect in his past so this isn’t a trigger.
any ideas, advice or suggestions or anyone who has been in a similar situation would be helpful.
At what point is putting an aggressive horse PTS your option?
12YO gelding- always being fiesty on the ground and has always been aggressive - kicking, biting, striking and lunging/charging towards although the behaviour is unpredictable. Some days he’s an angel, amazing to handle but then some days he just switches and is a complete different horse. I could be leading him in from the field and he would randomly pin his ears back rear up and lunge down towards me with his teeth.
I’ve come to learn to read his expressions well which is how I’ve managed to stay safe, I can tell normally on certain days if he is worth attempting to handle or not and some days it’s just not worth the risk.
He has been checked by the vet/chiropractor/physio/vet. Saddle has also been checked although he is generally good under the saddle (was a vertical rearer as a youngster but rarely does this now unless excited or fizzed up).
I’ve gone back to basic ground work numerous times and tried to start at the start and had a many instructors come out in the past to help including natural horsemanship which defiantly works best for him and it has helped improved his groundwork in the school slightly but he always has days where he switches and is unsafe and unpredictable to handle and I’m struggling to find a trainer that can go much further with him as he’s at a point now that he doesn’t want to be pushed any further. If you push him too for he just switches again.
I now have a 1 year old little boy and struggling to manage my gelding behaviour whilst having a baby as his behaviour is starting to get more dangerous. I can’t risk selling him on or loaning as this would be irresponsible but at the same time it’s being increasing unsafe for me to handle him.
I have the vet coming out next week to have a check over him again and discuss possibly looking to see if he has any ulcers but I’m really at lost end on what to do.
Would ulcers cause such aggressive behaviour randomly and just towards humans? He is fine towards other horses and never lashes out at them, if anything he is always at the bottom of the pecking order. Is there anything else that could potentially be causing this, or could it be that he is just a well dominated horse?
there is no abuse/neglect in his past so this isn’t a trigger.
any ideas, advice or suggestions or anyone who has been in a similar situation would be helpful.