splashgirl45
Lurcher lover
great news trakky!!!! we will need pics of the lovely pony please
Will do, we are all set to leave at silly o'clock tomorrow to get him as he's a fair distance away ?great news trakky!!!! we will need pics of the lovely pony please
He's decided one half on one long side of the school by the chickens and pole storage is terrifying. Really finding it hard work to keep him straight/not spooking down there.
I'd say this is absolutely normal at this stage, but I'd give up trying to make him stay straight or you might just seal it in his mind forever that it's a problem area.
With my PRE mare, who took a similar objection to one side of my arena, I had to let her spook and then pretend she had never done it. Then she forgot about it. If I insisted on her staying straight it could be 45 minutes before I got what I wanted. With other horses, the right answer was to shoulder in past, and with one or two, just to stay away from the area until their brain was back in their head.
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Oh yes! Swinging wildly between "I must be mad what have I done" and "oh my god this year is going to be awesome"Just think though, it is mid winter! I would expect an extra blip in spring with the grass, then a settled summer.
It does all sound very normal for a rising 5yo, in a new home, mid winter.
The important bit is... are you enjoying him?
I'd say this is absolutely normal at this stage, but I'd give up trying to make him stay straight or you might just seal it in his mind forever that it's a problem area.
With my PRE mare, who took a similar objection to one side of my arena, I had to let her spook and then pretend she had never done it. Then she forgot about it. If I insisted on her staying straight it could be 45 minutes before I got what I wanted. With other horses, the right answer was to shoulder in past, and with one or two, just to stay away from the area until their brain was back in their head.
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Just think though, it is mid winter! I would expect an extra blip in spring with the grass, then a settled summer.
It does all sound very normal for a rising 5yo, in a new home, mid winter.
The important bit is... are you enjoying him?
Thank you!I was thinking exactly this.
Setting a new horse in winter is always going to be a bit trickier than in the warmer, brighter months, so you really are doing a great job!
that's great news. The vet that vetted Lari for me said try not to ride more than twice a week in the school if you can help it. He said he sees so many lameness injuries with horses through the winter because everyone is confined to the school due to the dark nights/mornings.Update from me.
It's been up and down. As is to be expected with a new mostly tb 5yo I guess.
We have cracked the entry and exit gate code thing have hacked alone for 40 mins, totally chuffed with him on that.
Had napping issues....out hacking both alone and in company and heading up to the school. And he is VERY uncertain when things happen like jump wings suddenly being outside the school or the poles being somewhere new in a pile.
He's decided one half on one long side of the school by the chickens and pole storage is terrifying. Really finding it hard work to keep him straight/not spooking down there. Instructor is helping with that.
Mostly hacking and going in the arena twice a week. Once for a lesson and once for practice.
I'd say this is absolutely normal at this stage, but I'd give up trying to make him stay straight or you might just seal it in his mind forever that it's a problem area.
With my PRE mare, who took a similar objection to one side of my arena, I had to let her spook and then pretend she had never done it. Then she forgot about it. If I insisted on her staying straight it could be 45 minutes before I got what I wanted. With other horses, the right answer was to shoulder in past, and with one or two, just to stay away from the area until their brain was back in their head.
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I agree that a slightly different approach may be better, as you haven't made much progress.
Sometimes I will do as @ycbm says but, if it now sealed into his mind that there is a problem area, I use a different approach. I would allow him to shy away from this area, then work hard wherever he feels OK. Then I invite them back to the scary area, to rest. So, they can go to the scary area and just stand. But, of they want to leave, that is good, we can go work hard elsewhere. When we dismount at the end of a session, that is also in the previously scary rest area.
I have used this for a number of horses. Soon, they want to go there.