AdorableAlice
Well-Known Member
Recently there have been many posts and questions revolving around problems with leading, stabling or turning out alone, thug youngsters, pair bonds etc.
I actively teach my horses, including the youngstock to accept being alone in a stable or paddock should the need arise for them to do so. For instance my 2 year old filly has been inside since Sunday evening through injury. She can see one horse in an adjoining paddock, but because she has been taught to cope with being alone occasionally she has settled immediately in a row of 5 boxes with no neighbours. I take the view that teaching them to be independent early in their lives will set them up for the future. I cannot be doing with screaming clingy horses. I also expect them to back off the door as I approach and to move over with a verbal command, to lead without pulling or hanging back and to turn in gateways without being asked or shoved and to stand quietly.
This to me, is the most basic of training, yet so many horses do not seem to have this basic grounding and present their owners with real problems. Have standards changed ? am I a rarity in my insistence of manners regardless of the age of the horse. I had two visiting horses in a while ago, both of whom flattened me in the doorway, normal behaviour their owners told me and explained how they had never seen horses step back as the door was opened.
Interested to hear your thoughts on equine manners.
I actively teach my horses, including the youngstock to accept being alone in a stable or paddock should the need arise for them to do so. For instance my 2 year old filly has been inside since Sunday evening through injury. She can see one horse in an adjoining paddock, but because she has been taught to cope with being alone occasionally she has settled immediately in a row of 5 boxes with no neighbours. I take the view that teaching them to be independent early in their lives will set them up for the future. I cannot be doing with screaming clingy horses. I also expect them to back off the door as I approach and to move over with a verbal command, to lead without pulling or hanging back and to turn in gateways without being asked or shoved and to stand quietly.
This to me, is the most basic of training, yet so many horses do not seem to have this basic grounding and present their owners with real problems. Have standards changed ? am I a rarity in my insistence of manners regardless of the age of the horse. I had two visiting horses in a while ago, both of whom flattened me in the doorway, normal behaviour their owners told me and explained how they had never seen horses step back as the door was opened.
Interested to hear your thoughts on equine manners.