Peglo
Well-Known Member
I mean this thread was started as OP wanted to know people’s opinion on horse behaviourists and SY in particular so it would be fairly off topic to start ranting about horse abuse and idiot owners instead.
I' sure he would do as many sessions as people want if they were prepared to pay for several days but, taking into account his travelling and overnight costs you are then talking about very BIG money. People simply won't or can't pay so he goes in and sorts a problem. At the end of the day it comes down to money.A video of SY’s came up on my FB feed yesterday and it came with a warning as another person had battered a horse to try and get her in a trailer. (That was utterly horrendous to watch and he put plenty of warnings before showing it)
He was going to work with this horse and he did make progress. I eventually had to fast forward it and the mare was walking onto the box without much stress so what he did obviously worked.
Earlier on he was working with backing up and he got very strong with her and tugged hard on her head. That was unpleasant to watch and he admitted he would usually take longer to teach this but “only” had so much time so had to be more forceful.
I just kind of feel it would be better if he did take more time. Why not break up his sessions over several days? I guess it wouldn’t pay so well but he sells his sessions about being for the horse so what’s more important, the horse or big profits?
There’s a fair difference between watching SY’s methods and TRT. I know some aren’t a fan of that either and he’s selling a different product I guess but it seems nicer for the horse to break things down and slowly work through the process rather than forcing a resolution in a time frame.
SY’s videos would still carry weight if it was edited to cover a few days worth of work with the horses. After all there’s seldom a quick fix with horses and we should all know anything with horses takes time and effort. TRT method will show the difference in before and after (as advertisement) and it makes you want to find out how he got there without worrying about the time frame so I don’t think the 1 session fix is all that important.
SY also did a bit where he hit the lead rope with a whip to back the horse up which wasn’t comfortable viewing. In contrast TT would focus energy on the ground where he wanted the horse out of without any physical pressure on the horse at all and feels much more positive for the horse and viewer.
I think the really big issue is all the horses / animals that are badly treated, ignored, abused etc etc - they’re the ones we should be getting upset about.
I will freely admit to hitting a lead rope with whips or twirling them or other measures to get a horse to go back if the alternative is for half a ton to walk over the top of me. i am unwilling to end up in hospital.
I get far more upset by the headgear on dressage horses and by many other different aspects than by SY.
[polite cough] I was not ranting.I mean this thread was started as OP wanted to know people’s opinion on horse behaviourists and SY in particular so it would be fairly off topic to start ranting about horse abuse and idiot owners instead.
you are quite right it isn't training. It is dealing with and correcting a situation that the owner has created with their own training method which in many cases appears to be sadly lacking. I'm not sure that horses want all this learning theory. They want black and white ie what to do which will make their lives easy and to know what their place in the herd is. (human/horse herd)Can't stand him. He floods horses, it isn't training. They never learn what to actually do, just how to avoid punishment. I really find it abhorrent. I can't get past trainers of any species that do the whole "it's this or they'll be PTS/someone will get hurt", like there isn't tonnes of middle ground (speaking as someone who has worked with various species trained with +R, from large carnivores to fish, it absolutely can be done). He goes completely overboard on "corrections". His explanations often make no logical sense, he doesn't appear to have any understanding of behaviour/learning theory. It's all just bully tactics of a wannabe cowboy.
He also talks over his clients a lot, frankly I find him quite rude. I have also noticed they mute the sound on videos frequently and that makes me think they're hiding things they don't want viewers to hear. You couldn't pay me to have him out to my horse.
I think you might want to look this up before you keep trying to have conversations you're not equipped for.you are quite right it isn't training. It is dealing with and correcting a situation that the owner has created with their own training method which in many cases appears to be sadly lacking. I'm not sure that horses want all this learning theory. They want black and white ie what to do which will make their lives easy and to know what their place in the herd is. (human/horse herd)
I'm not sure that SY has understanding of this learning theory. He does seem to be able to read the horse which is the most important aspect. .
Learning theory isn’t optional — it’s simply how horses, and all animals, learn. It's science, not opinion.you are quite right it isn't training. It is dealing with and correcting a situation that the owner has created with their own training method which in many cases appears to be sadly lacking. I'm not sure that horses want all this learning theory. They want black and white ie what to do which will make their lives easy and to know what their place in the herd is. (human/horse herd)
I'm not sure that SY has understanding of this learning theory. He does seem to be able to read the horse which is the most important aspect. .
Of course it is!Dominance is not a character trait.
100%. Training off ~*vibes*~Learning theory isn’t optional — it’s simply how horses, and all animals, learn. It's science, not opinion.
Horses also don't see us as herd members. This narrative opens up this awful "dominance" debate that again, people like SY have no understanding of, yet frequently cites. Dominance is not a character trait. It’s very fluid, context-dependent and relationship-specific, referring to access to resources.
This simply isn't true. You are not up to date on the current research of equine herd dynamics.Of course it is!
What do you see when you what a herd leader put the other herd members in place. It's dominance! Hence the term 'Dominant mare' - usually the used for the herd leader, often a mare in a group of broodmares.
@paddy555 I agree with your comments. SY has a place - his ability to read the body language of a horse to keep him self safe and react with the right timing to correct bad/undesirable behaviours is what makes him his money.
I dare say he costs a few £££ for a session but his interaction draws a line in the sand and then gives the owner (yes usually novice) the tools to continue the training. A lot of his videos have the updates at the end (if you get that far) from owners telling him how well they are doing afterwards.
book learning, well google and theory nowadays is fine, but then with horses there is 600kg of real life where one end bites and the other kicks. Not all of them are the sweet gently animals that I suspect you are handling.100%. Training off ~*vibes*~
No thanks. Show your work!
This simply isn't true. You are not up to date on the current research of equine herd dynamics.
I heard it put very eloquently at a seminar this week "pecking order is for chickens". Horses and equids in general do not have a strict order of social dominance. That is chickens. It's even more complicated than that for chickens tbh.
as a matter of interest how do you deal with dominance ie physical dominance of the horse over the human which I presume you do accept exists.Learning theory isn’t optional — it’s simply how horses, and all animals, learn. It's science, not opinion.
Horses also don't see us as herd members. This narrative opens up this awful "dominance" debate that again, people like SY have no understanding of, yet frequently cites. Dominance is not a character trait. It’s very fluid, context-dependent and relationship-specific, referring to access to resources.
Sorry, the academic in me has to step in! Dominance isn't a character trait as it can't exist in a vacuum. Basically no individual can be "dominant" on it's own. It will always be dominant in relation to another individual at a given time in a given situation.Of course it is!
What do you see when you what a herd leader put the other herd members in place. It's dominance! Hence the term 'Dominant mare' - usually the used for the herd leader, often a mare in a group of broodmares.
Can we also say that having "big" reactions to resource guarding is actually a sign of feeling less secure about your access to said resource. The behaviour people see as "dominant" is actually low status behaviour. A truly confident animal doesn't need to waste that much energy.
We understand these days that a reactive dog is often an insecure or anxious dog. If we are still talking about horse trainers, if you need to use big loud corrections all the time I can take inferences from that![]()
Yes some of what is done makes for uneasy watching
I was making a joke.As for 'big loud corrections 'ALL THE TIME' that is not what the SY or others with similar techniques is about. It's firm correction to fix a potentially dangerous problem that can then be maintained quietly, but sometimes firmly by the owner. The biggest thing SY teaches is personal space and respecting it. It's fundamental for a domestic horse to understand that especially on a livery yard being handled by various (usually young) people unsupervised.
I agree. The invented numpty above would actually be better served by better quality information being more freely available and circulating in "Real Life" spaces than by putting all their faith in a One and Done savior who comes and does magic and "fixes" all your problems. We have to stop accepting laziness from people. Be curious, do the reading, do the thinking, step away from "well it works" and "it's always been done this way" and look at why it works and why it's done that way. It's not that hard!But is this not why it’s good to have the conversation? Surely we shouldn’t be blindly following what we see being done online?
I don’t doubt what SY does works but it doesn’t mean we shouldn’t discuss how he does it and ask questions if there’s better ways does it? Not just SY but anyone.
We owe it to our horses to keep asking questions and learning.
this is partly aimed at your post and partly at others in the hope some will watch it and comment. It is about SY obviously. I cannot see anywhere in the video where he handles the horse badly. The owner who was not a novice just out of her depth in this instance clearly understood all his reasoning and was able to catch the horse and walk it around the stable at the end of the 2 hours. It boded well for her future handling. She was taught exactly how to handle the horse. He discussed everything clearly with her throughout the visit. I cannot see anything either wrong in how he dealt with it, that the horse suffered in any way. 2 hours and the horse could be caught and handled. He said several times that a lot more work was now required to build on it. The owner hadn't been able to catch the horse for 6 weeks. That was a dangerous situation n case a vet as needed.. I am not going to change my ethical stance based on a fantasy about the most clueless person you can inventI also don't agree that he teaches people to handle horses "properly."
love it.Resource guarding IMHO develops for many reasons. In a domesticated horse it's usually man made. Wrong herd, wrong management and feeding plan/schedule, Neglect, lack of handling and knowledge, the list potentially endless.
As for 'big loud corrections 'ALL THE TIME' that is not what the SY or others with similar techniques is about. It's firm correction to fix a potentially dangerous problem that can then be maintained quietly, but sometimes firmly by the owner. The biggest thing SY teaches is personal space and respecting it. It's fundamental for a domestic horse to understand that especially on a livery yard being handled by various (usually young) people unsupervised.
Imagine the scenario,
Your on a livery yard with your first horse. You have had a few lesson and you think your a pro. You spend hours grooming your horse and buy all the best feeds that all the adverts say are good for your horse. It rains and the fields get muddy and the YO doesn't want turn out. That's OK as he's not been in the field for weeks anyway as you don't want him to get cold and muddy and he likes his stable anyway. Your still feeding all the magic feeds, along with treats and licks etc to keep him entertained. The hay gets in short supply locally so YO starts buying haylage everyone else complains as their worried about their horses behaviour changing etc, but your beautiful dobbin loves it and you see no issues. Your riding less as the nights are dark and before you know it dobbin's behaviour is terrible. He's stressed, he's biting and spinning his back side on you when you enter the stable. YO stops her staff handling him as he's potentially dangerous to the young girls on the yard. When you finally catch him in the stable he barges through the door way pinning you against the stable door and gets free. Next you walk him to the school and he does the same. Your now hurt and embarrassed as your clearly not the pro you thought you were and everyone on the yard saw. Where do you turn? . YO tells you if you don't sort dobbins behaviour you'll have to leave.you know no one outside of the yard your on in the horsey community so you google. SY pops up and is recommended in a few different places. So out of desperation you call him. He comes along, gives you some advise of feeding dobbin (probably a coloured cob - no hard feed and low energy hay, plenty of turnout), tells you to stop titbiting and feeding from the hand. He then spends some time putting some ground rules in place reminding Dobbin he needs to respect personal space and puts a few commands in place. He then teaches you how to handle your horse properly. He ensures you have the tools required to continue what he has set up for you. He helps make your horse 'safe' again so you can have support from the YO and the staff and they aren't at risk of being hurt.
I'm shocked that several posters on this thread don't see the value in what this guy or others using this technique do. Yes some of what is done makes for uneasy watching but so does some of the behaviours shown by the horses too. I think you need to see what is done after the 'big behaviour and big correction' to see that the technique does work.
ETA if anyone watches the first 20 seconds and thinks they cannot possibly relate to that then it is worth watching the whole thing not just the highlights
Ok so you haven't had a horse drag you across a yard. A well placed drop of weight and a hard pull on a rope generally helps solves this. If a horse understands he's stronger than you he'll always use his weight against you. I quick 'oh f#ck that didn't work' usually solves this problem.In the first 24 seconds, it shows a horse in a situation where he is repeatedly likely to have sustained soft tissue damage.
Every domestic horse needs to conform to human requirements.All that is being taught to the horse is how to conform to human requirements, that he just has to shut up and cope, and that he must relinquish any sense of autonomy that the human does not wish him to have.
Ok so you haven't had a horse drag you across a yard.
A well placed drop of weight and a hard pull on a rope generally helps solves this.
If a horse understands he's stronger than you he'll always use his weight against you.
Every domestic horse needs to conform to human requirements.