Tinypony
Well-Known Member
Norfolk Pie, I think the difficulty was that it wasn't a problem horse clinic, and it wasn't really a clinic for backing difficult to start horses. The conversation between the organisers shown in the film really rang a bell with me, as I've been there. It's "This person has brought this horse along that has far too many issues to address to attempt in 4 days. And we can't have them in the arena with everyone else because there will be bodies all over the floor. And anyway, if we did it would spoil it for all the other paying customers because they wouldn't get their fair share of attention...".
My guess at what Buck was trying to do when he worked with the stallion in the round pen and roped the leg was that he was having a last-ditch look at whether he thought the horse could be safely dealt with by someone else after he'd gone. He probably kicked himself when the experienced bloke he thought would be OK got hurt, but then horses aren't an exact science. To be fair, he wasn't offering that owner a quick-fix solution, but trying to work with the situation he was presented with. Leg roping is really controversial, but I leg rope all of mine and never have a strong reaction maybe because it's more instinctive in a horse to have a think about something around their leg than it is to just go mad and run away. (Think about how they survive various natural obstacles around the leg).
I know how this situation arises because I've hosted clinics where I've been ready to just give someone their money back and send them and their horse home. But then I have the trainer worrying about that owner and saying that maybe if they could at least do something to send that person back safer than they arrived... and what if we do an hour or so at the end of each day rather than having them in the main clinic... Then the next thing we know the trainer is getting slated all over the internet for being too tough on the horse, or on the person, when ideally they wouldn't have chosen to deal with it in that environment at all.
(Just to be clear - this does not refer to anyone of my Kent friends and contacts OK??).
Maybe other trainers with another approach, who weren't due to be back on the road in 3 days, could have dealt with that sad, scared and aggressive stallion differently. But they weren't there to offer were they? Really sad to think about it.
My guess at what Buck was trying to do when he worked with the stallion in the round pen and roped the leg was that he was having a last-ditch look at whether he thought the horse could be safely dealt with by someone else after he'd gone. He probably kicked himself when the experienced bloke he thought would be OK got hurt, but then horses aren't an exact science. To be fair, he wasn't offering that owner a quick-fix solution, but trying to work with the situation he was presented with. Leg roping is really controversial, but I leg rope all of mine and never have a strong reaction maybe because it's more instinctive in a horse to have a think about something around their leg than it is to just go mad and run away. (Think about how they survive various natural obstacles around the leg).
I know how this situation arises because I've hosted clinics where I've been ready to just give someone their money back and send them and their horse home. But then I have the trainer worrying about that owner and saying that maybe if they could at least do something to send that person back safer than they arrived... and what if we do an hour or so at the end of each day rather than having them in the main clinic... Then the next thing we know the trainer is getting slated all over the internet for being too tough on the horse, or on the person, when ideally they wouldn't have chosen to deal with it in that environment at all.
(Just to be clear - this does not refer to anyone of my Kent friends and contacts OK??).
Maybe other trainers with another approach, who weren't due to be back on the road in 3 days, could have dealt with that sad, scared and aggressive stallion differently. But they weren't there to offer were they? Really sad to think about it.