chaps89
Well-Known Member
Evening.
I apologise in advance, this will be long but me & the owner of the horse concerned are at our wits ends as to what to do so are open to any ideas in case we've missed something.
I have been sharing a mare for just under 2 years now.
Initially, for about the first 8 or 9 months I never had a single problem with her, would happily get her in on her own in a head-collar (subsequently found out her owner only got her out in a Be Nice) & go out hacking no problems at all.
However, in April last year we lost her half brother and since then me & her owner have hit no end of problems.
To bring her in, she requires bridle, side reins & roller. At her worst she has needed the farmer (who she adores) and her owner to bring her in as well as this get up.
She will just throw herself on the ground, spin around/over you or rear (baby rears, never full up ones) Sometimes you will almost be at the gate when she starts this, other times it is almost as soon as she has been caught.
Once in she will be fine- tho she lets you know when she is ready to go back out & it is normally best to do so pronto.
To ride she can be similar- really quite nappy, and she spins- but only ever to the left. If you're successful in blocking her or ask her to turn back to the right she threatens to rear. They are never fast, put-you-on-the-floor spins, just sheer naughtiness of I don't want to, so you won't make me.
We have tried alsorts.
- Calmers (normal magnesium ones & vet prescribed ones)
- Bringing in just for feeding then turning back out
- Different hacking routes (we are fairly limited in hacking as she is kept near Hounslow West London)
- Schooling (no school, but 2 schooling areas) If you can get her there she will normally be ok.
- Bringing her in with treats/bribery
- We even went and bought a companion pony for her in September (she lives in a mixed herd of approx 20 horses but we wondered if she missed being one of a pair when it came to being handled as it were) He is a saint, but has no effect on her (typically)
- Hacking alone & in company (better in company but have limited opportunities to hack with some-one else on a horse. A person on the ground or the companion being led or long reined makes beggar all difference)
- Change in scenery- at Christmas she came to me for 2 weeks (with the intention of proper schooling & jumping, however she got away from me during one of her antics in the field the day before she came to me & took a fall in the field, checked her, she seemed fine but the lorry journey aggravated it & she came off the box with a huge leg so had 2 weeks box rest & in-hand walking instead) She was marginally better than at her 'home' but still naughty.
- Different grazing fields- they have summer & winter grazing at her yard, she is marginally better in the summer field but not much.
- Instructors riding her- they can win the battles but she still tries it on, the longest argument lasting over 2 hours with a pro rider- they only needed her to go another 100 yards then she was done!
- Taking her out for 'parties', she loves dressage so last year we did a few unaffil. events with her, in some she was lovely, one she was horrid and I had to retire mid test. Also taken her out hacking in an area she's been to before with my horse (who she knows but no longer lives with) and she was tricky then too.
- Ground work - when she's not throwing herself about her manners are impeccable & she is normally very spacially aware, so although we've worked on ground work, if she's being good it's not something that can be worked on, but when she decides she can't/won't do something all manners go out of the window, and frankly I am surprised no-one has been seriously hurt yet as she will just flatten you.
The only thing that changed was losing her brother, and she saw the body before he was taken away.
She was also used to going off for events for a few days and leaving him behind and vice-versa and even on a day-to-day basis being done separately to her brother was never an issue.
If it helps to give her history, she is a 14.2hh mare, tb/pony cross, she was an orphan foal, who found a foster mare but the mares owners wouldn't let her owner come back to collect her so she had a fairly traumatic weaning being 'stolen' back in the middle of the night
At about 5 years old she had a fairly major surgery on one of her front legs due to bone chips and a years box rest, otherwise pretty healthy. Competed up to elementary dressage & 50km endurance rides and was previously quite a nice 'person' as it were, according to her owner, she's always had this streak but it would only happen occasionally (as I say in 8 months of riding her about twice a week and regular feeding I never had an issue) rather than be the norm for her. She's now coming up to 11 years old.
Normal physical healthy checks & tack checks are fine (as a result of her fall at Christmas she sustained arthritic changes to her hock but that has made no change to her behaviour. She is ridden in a neue schule snaffle, flash noseband & running martingale, same as she always has)
I rode her on Saturday and she was like the old horse, came in beautifully with just me leading her in a bridle, no side reins, stood nicely to be groomed & have a cuddle & rode out lovely with 1 minor spin. Today, her owner was going to box her down to friends in Devon for a week away to try giving her something fun to do but after 3 hours gave up trying to get her in (and her owner is most definitely not feeble)
Please, any ideas as to what we can try next?!
Thankyou!
I apologise in advance, this will be long but me & the owner of the horse concerned are at our wits ends as to what to do so are open to any ideas in case we've missed something.
I have been sharing a mare for just under 2 years now.
Initially, for about the first 8 or 9 months I never had a single problem with her, would happily get her in on her own in a head-collar (subsequently found out her owner only got her out in a Be Nice) & go out hacking no problems at all.
However, in April last year we lost her half brother and since then me & her owner have hit no end of problems.
To bring her in, she requires bridle, side reins & roller. At her worst she has needed the farmer (who she adores) and her owner to bring her in as well as this get up.
She will just throw herself on the ground, spin around/over you or rear (baby rears, never full up ones) Sometimes you will almost be at the gate when she starts this, other times it is almost as soon as she has been caught.
Once in she will be fine- tho she lets you know when she is ready to go back out & it is normally best to do so pronto.
To ride she can be similar- really quite nappy, and she spins- but only ever to the left. If you're successful in blocking her or ask her to turn back to the right she threatens to rear. They are never fast, put-you-on-the-floor spins, just sheer naughtiness of I don't want to, so you won't make me.
We have tried alsorts.
- Calmers (normal magnesium ones & vet prescribed ones)
- Bringing in just for feeding then turning back out
- Different hacking routes (we are fairly limited in hacking as she is kept near Hounslow West London)
- Schooling (no school, but 2 schooling areas) If you can get her there she will normally be ok.
- Bringing her in with treats/bribery
- We even went and bought a companion pony for her in September (she lives in a mixed herd of approx 20 horses but we wondered if she missed being one of a pair when it came to being handled as it were) He is a saint, but has no effect on her (typically)
- Hacking alone & in company (better in company but have limited opportunities to hack with some-one else on a horse. A person on the ground or the companion being led or long reined makes beggar all difference)
- Change in scenery- at Christmas she came to me for 2 weeks (with the intention of proper schooling & jumping, however she got away from me during one of her antics in the field the day before she came to me & took a fall in the field, checked her, she seemed fine but the lorry journey aggravated it & she came off the box with a huge leg so had 2 weeks box rest & in-hand walking instead) She was marginally better than at her 'home' but still naughty.
- Different grazing fields- they have summer & winter grazing at her yard, she is marginally better in the summer field but not much.
- Instructors riding her- they can win the battles but she still tries it on, the longest argument lasting over 2 hours with a pro rider- they only needed her to go another 100 yards then she was done!
- Taking her out for 'parties', she loves dressage so last year we did a few unaffil. events with her, in some she was lovely, one she was horrid and I had to retire mid test. Also taken her out hacking in an area she's been to before with my horse (who she knows but no longer lives with) and she was tricky then too.
- Ground work - when she's not throwing herself about her manners are impeccable & she is normally very spacially aware, so although we've worked on ground work, if she's being good it's not something that can be worked on, but when she decides she can't/won't do something all manners go out of the window, and frankly I am surprised no-one has been seriously hurt yet as she will just flatten you.
The only thing that changed was losing her brother, and she saw the body before he was taken away.
She was also used to going off for events for a few days and leaving him behind and vice-versa and even on a day-to-day basis being done separately to her brother was never an issue.
If it helps to give her history, she is a 14.2hh mare, tb/pony cross, she was an orphan foal, who found a foster mare but the mares owners wouldn't let her owner come back to collect her so she had a fairly traumatic weaning being 'stolen' back in the middle of the night
At about 5 years old she had a fairly major surgery on one of her front legs due to bone chips and a years box rest, otherwise pretty healthy. Competed up to elementary dressage & 50km endurance rides and was previously quite a nice 'person' as it were, according to her owner, she's always had this streak but it would only happen occasionally (as I say in 8 months of riding her about twice a week and regular feeding I never had an issue) rather than be the norm for her. She's now coming up to 11 years old.
Normal physical healthy checks & tack checks are fine (as a result of her fall at Christmas she sustained arthritic changes to her hock but that has made no change to her behaviour. She is ridden in a neue schule snaffle, flash noseband & running martingale, same as she always has)
I rode her on Saturday and she was like the old horse, came in beautifully with just me leading her in a bridle, no side reins, stood nicely to be groomed & have a cuddle & rode out lovely with 1 minor spin. Today, her owner was going to box her down to friends in Devon for a week away to try giving her something fun to do but after 3 hours gave up trying to get her in (and her owner is most definitely not feeble)
Please, any ideas as to what we can try next?!
Thankyou!