fairhill
Well-Known Member
Has anyone got any ideas for encouraging my horse to move forwards?
She's 6, but still quite green, and part cleveland bay, and has definitely inhertited the stubborn gene.
I've tried schooling whip, asking nicely first, then booting, and spurs.
The only time she wakes up is if someone chases us with a lunge whip, which is great (and reassures me that diet/physical issues aren't the problem), but I can't always have someone on the ground with me.
When I use the schooling whip she tends to just swish her tail (if that!), rather than moving forward, and I don't want to have to keep hitting her
She's hacked out often, and is a bit more forward then, and we use poles, and small jumps to give her variety. It's definitely an attitude issue rather than physical (back and saddle been checked).
I'm now wondering if tying a plastic bag to the whip might get a response from her - has anyone tried this?
She's 6, but still quite green, and part cleveland bay, and has definitely inhertited the stubborn gene.
I've tried schooling whip, asking nicely first, then booting, and spurs.
The only time she wakes up is if someone chases us with a lunge whip, which is great (and reassures me that diet/physical issues aren't the problem), but I can't always have someone on the ground with me.
When I use the schooling whip she tends to just swish her tail (if that!), rather than moving forward, and I don't want to have to keep hitting her
She's hacked out often, and is a bit more forward then, and we use poles, and small jumps to give her variety. It's definitely an attitude issue rather than physical (back and saddle been checked).
I'm now wondering if tying a plastic bag to the whip might get a response from her - has anyone tried this?