FfionWinnie
Well-Known Member
I confess that I saw that and sniggered! I am actively avoiding responding to that particular poster though, so I stepped away from the "reply" button.
You're not alone there, on both counts.
I confess that I saw that and sniggered! I am actively avoiding responding to that particular poster though, so I stepped away from the "reply" button.
I am very sorry that this thread has come across to some as a thinly veiled attempt at bullying. It was NOT intended that way AT ALL. I'm so glad that Rowan can see what I was getting at. I can only apologise that i didn't make it clearer to the rest of you.
I really regret linking to that thread now.
No...it's never right to hit an animal that hard IMHO.
One turned her bum on another horse, and reversed at it, lashing out - I had to take action before she got to it, and did some serious damage, and she didn't respond to an initial kick/smack/growl. The other was reversing at high speed toward a water filled dyke, and rearing vertically whenever I touched his mouth, so I couldn't turn him away.
I'm sure someone thinks that I should have spotted the signs that **** was about to get real earlier, and dealt with it earlier, but with my hand on my heart, I can say that I got no more than a couple of seconds to do something, and what I did worked, where less action did not.
No...it's never right to hit an animal that hard IMHO.
Agree 100% with this.
I find that the most effective ways of moving a nappy horse and avoiding reversing, is to either wave a stick in their eyeline, or to hit your jacket with the long end of the reins, to make a noise which makes the horse move forward (just be ready to go with the rapid forward movement)
I was told by a pro rider many years ago, if you are going to hit a horse because something bad is going to happen hit them once & hit them hard. I questioned this & was told the punishment you have just inflicted is nothing compared to how they are disciplined within the herd by the dominant mare.
I have to say I think that is a rather poor excuse/justification. For a start, it makes it sound like the dominant mare has some sort of judicial or authoritative role, which I don't believe at all. And in any case, just because horses show violence towards each other on occasion doesn't mean we are also obliged to. We can do much better than that in choosing other means to teach good behaviour.I was told by a pro rider many years ago, if you are going to hit a horse because something bad is going to happen hit them once & hit them hard. I questioned this & was told the punishment you have just inflicted is nothing compared to how they are disciplined within the herd by the dominant mare.
I don't accept that in a dire emergency hitting a horse exceptionally hard is going to necessarily bring about a safe out come.
Should we carry a bit of fence post around to really get the message across?
I have a horse which I know straight from the horse's (dealer's) mouth was "disciplined" with alcothane pipe. You could have hit her as hard as you like and she didn't care. She also was completely unruly and terrible to handle so all the hitting hadn't changed her behaviour in the slightest.
I spent three weeks teaching her to behave properly and despite the fact she also napped, reared and was VERY dangerous to handle I did not resort to hitting her.
Now she has been here over a year and is a very pleasant horse to deal with in all ways and no longer naps or does any of the poor behaviours she demonstrated when I bought her. Recently I had an accident so she has been turned out to grass for 3 months almost. I caught her and walked her into the trailer yesterday, took her to the vets and she behaved impeccably.
My lessons stuck with her. The stick lessons did not.
I have to say I think that is a rather poor excuse/justification. For a start, it makes it sound like the dominant mare has some sort of judicial or authoritative role, which I don't believe at all. And in any case, just because horses show violence towards each other on occasion doesn't mean we are also obliged to. We can do much better than that in choosing other means to teach good behaviour.
Not trying to argue I'm also curious how you would handle a dangerous situation where you only had a few seconds to get the horse under control or risk serious injury to yourself the horse and others e.g I believe an earlier poster gave an example where the horse had reared and spun into the middle of a 60mph on a blind bend with traffic coming and she had to hit the horse to make it dart back to a safer position.
I don't accept that in a dire emergency hitting a horse exceptionally hard is going to necessarily bring about a safe out come.
I wouldn't be in that situation on the road in the first place.
You can't reliably count on hitting a horse and hoping it will make it dart the right way as a get out of death by RTC. What if if made the situation worse, how do you control the outcome to be sure that will be a better situation? At the end of the day people can do what they like with their own horses but I can't see the argument that hitting it hard enough to mark it, is going to do anything better than hitting it less hard or preferably not hitting it and instead finding another way to train it in the first place.
I'm no holier than thou bunny hugger, indeed I am probably tougher on my horses than the majority of people. However the things I do are understood by the horse. No horse learns properly just by being hit, surely we agree on that?
If you want to hit them, it has to be timed correctly to make it count, otherwise the horse does not associate the hit for the behaviour.
For instance I watched someone slapping her supposed beloved horse on the nose for biting. Did it stop it biting, no, did it make it flap it's head around when hands were raised, yes! I knew I could stop that horse in a few minutes but I wouldn't have hit it. Timing is everything and most people don't have it.
It's a role some ascribe to the 'alpha', but I don't think it is really the case. It doesn't seem relevant here, though, because we're not talking about training or "teaching a horse a lesson", but rather preventing something bad from happening.Errr, the dominant female has an authoritive role within the herd.
No argument there (see my first post #3).When a horse is reversing backwards towards a steep incline & you are both going over that with inevitable disasterous results lets think of another way & discus the matter with the horse & see if we can choose other means to teach good behaviour? Sometimes a crack with the whip is what needs to be done, not always, but sometimes there is no other choice.
This was my horse, who had never done that before and for the previous 8 years had hacked across that junction almost every day without a flicker.You haven't really answered my questionanswering like a politician hehe (joke). No I agree I personally wouldn't take an unpredictable horse on a road like that and yes I certainly agree hitting is not the way I want to train and educate my horse.
I'm just merely curious as to how you would handle and emergency situation like my example of the road and blind bend? Or for example a horse rearing and spinning near the edge of a sheer drop? If nicer methods had failed or you literally only had a few seconds to react
You haven't really answered my questionanswering like a politician hehe (joke). No I agree I personally wouldn't take an unpredictable horse on a road like that and yes I certainly agree hitting is not the way I want to train and educate my horse.
I'm just merely curious as to how you would handle and emergency situation like my example of the road and blind bend? Or for example a horse rearing and spinning near the edge of a sheer drop? If nicer methods had failed or you literally only had a few seconds to react
That's like asking me how I would take a non jumper round Badders XC, I just wouldn't be in that situation!
I wouldn't be on an unpredictable horse and I certainly wouldn't have it on a road or a dangerous drop.
The horse I mentioned I worked on the ground in safe situations for a long long time before I took it on a road, and the roads I deal with are not as dangerous as that. So I cannot imagine getting myself into a situation like that hence I wouldn't need to find a way out of it.
My main point however is that you cannot control the outcome of whacking them hard and you also can't say hitting them harder is going to give you a "better" outcome either so why try and justify it.
Incidentally with every napper I've owned I've let them walk back into a safe (ie not too deep and not full of sharps) ditch. It is the quickest way to teach them walking backwards isn't clever. I also let one walk into my tractor at home (as it's fairly indestructible) and that cured her of walking into things too as she taught herself that it was flipping uncomfortable to do such a stupid thing. It was her choice to do it, and she learned from it for life. Far better than me whacking her one would have taught her.
This was my horse, who had never done that before and for the previous 8 years had hacked across that junction almost every day without a flicker.
I have no idea what caused it that day, i had all sorts of investigations carried out on him and never did find out why.
How do you propose to never put yourself in that situation? I had what for 8 years had been a very reliable horse who had been totally safe in traffic and never even thought of rearing. It was not a new situation for the horse, nor had anything changed?
When the horse in question died he was 25 years old and I had owned him for 15 years, that day is seared into my memory as the only time in those 15 years where the horse reared and the only time he ever put me in a dangerous situation
I think it's a bit harsh to make a separate thread about this, the OP clearly felt horrible about the situation, and it was to stop the horse going down a ditch. These things happen, and she wasn't intentionally smacking the horse with the intent of hurting it!
I have answered you equine dream, it's not the hitting I have a problem with per say it's the" hitting them hard enough to mark them, is more likely to save you from some unknown danger" suggestion I am taking issue with. I also believe that quite rarely will a human have good enough timing to successfully hit a horse and get the outcome they need in the long term.
You want to hit your horse feel free but you aren't going to convince me that one of my horses is suddenly going to rear in the middle of the road on a blind bend with a sheer drop to the side and that I will suddenly decide my only option is to thrash it to save our lives, because it is not going to happen.
Do I ride with a stick, yes, do I touch my horses with it, yes, have I ever marked any horse in any sort of situation in my entire 30 odd years of riding all types and breeds, no! If someone else did as a one off mistake, would I condemn them, no, but let's not dress it up as "its ok in an emergency" because it's not.
I'm interested to know what those who say they would never hit a horse would do in a life or death emergency situation, and as of yet no one has actually answered this question![]()
So if one hard hit with a whip isn't your answer what is? You haven't answered the question and are clearly avoiding answering the question.I have answered you equine dream, it's not the hitting I have a problem with per say it's the" hitting them hard enough to mark them, is more likely to save you from some unknown danger" suggestion I am taking issue with. I also believe that quite rarely will a human have good enough timing to successfully hit a horse and get the outcome they need in the long term.
You want to hit your horse feel free but you aren't going to convince me that one of my horses is suddenly going to rear in the middle of the road on a blind bend with a sheer drop to the side and that I will suddenly decide my only option is to thrash it to save our lives, because it is not going to happen.
Do I ride with a stick, yes, do I touch my horses with it, yes, have I ever marked any horse in any sort of situation in my entire 30 odd years of riding all types and breeds, no! If someone else did as a one off mistake, would I condemn them, no, but let's not dress it up as "its ok in an emergency" because it's not.
It was my horse mentioned, I owned that horse for 15 years and that episode was the only time he ever reared and the only time he ever put us in danger.