Angelz
Well-Known Member
If so, any tips?
He always traveled fine in other peoples trailers and lorries, alone or in company, I bought my own and traveled him in it for the first time on Sunday......he went ballistic, the trailer was rocking, he was in a terrible state when I unloaded him, fortunately not injured and calmed as soon as he was out. Last night I had an experienced friend come over to see if they could identify the problem, horse loaded fine, started pawing when back door went up, started going ballistic as soon as the trailer moved, friend got in the trailer with him and they went on a very short journey.....horse in a terrible state again.
How is the space avaialble compared to what you have travelled in before?
Ive got a 505 and the others were 510, so will have to google and see if they are wider
however did get full width bars, which helped a great deal - horse stands at an angle and speads his hind legs out to balance. I also worked on driving VERY slowly, particularly round corners, and even now, minimise the length of trips.
Im going to try this, remove partitions and full width bar, as the person who got in the trailer with him said he was trying to open his legs wider to balance but couldnt and so was scrabbling, the side of the trailer
Recently I took him off his suppliments as a trial - he was still sound, but started scrabbling again. This time we knew what he was telling us, and unloaded him and warmed him up in trot (had loaded straight from stable) - once warmed up he loaded perfectly and started eating his hay, and travelled fine.
What does warming them up in trot before hand do?
I think that the point in that rather long story, is that if they previously loaded and travelled OK, and suddenly stop, they are probably trying to tell you something. it is your job to find out what! Not for a minute trying to say that your horse has dodgy hocks, but something about the new trailer, or his current state of mind/body, is making it uncomfortable. A process of elimination might help you discover what.
process of elimination has begunalthough Im going to have to be very carefull, Im going to try and feed him in the trailer later but have a feeling hes going to be to stressed to eat, if he is then I will just walk him in and out a couple of times and build up the time we are stood in the trailer gradually, untill hes relaxed enough to eat. Then I might travel him a couple of meters in the friends trailer, then try him without partitions in mine. Perhaps I should try another horse in my trailer too to check trailer out BUT whos going to want to take that risk! I feel its to risky to try and travel him in company until hes relaxed on his own again, I thought perhaps some mirrors???
Another thought I had, the new trailer doesnt have windows above the unload ramps, anyone think this could have an effect?