keeperscottage
Well-Known Member
One of our geldings, a 17.1hh TB ex-pointer is (as subject heading) totally obsessed by one of our mares, a 16.2hh TB ex-pointer, to the point (no pun intended!) where he is bordering on "psycho"!
In a nutshell.....
Bought him five years ago (saw him race, he never got beyond two miles, owned by friend who had "gifted" the aforementioned mare to my daughter) and he was a total "pussy cat" - I, in my advancing years
, happily hacked him out; he'd canter alongside another horse on a loose rein - he was a complete doddle to ride! He was a complete dream!
However, at this time, aforementioned mare (Lizzie) was sent off to stud. The following year, when she had her foal, she was in a field about a quarter of a mile away (all this time, our gelding, Jimmy, was well behaved). The year after that, Jimmy's hoof quality was so bad that farrier suggested we turn him away without shoes, so he was unridden. Brought back into work and he wasn't quite right. so more time off.
Basically, he's now fine and should be back in work but he's been a complete nightmare because he loves Lizzie so much he doesn't want to leave her. You have to drag him out of the field to get him away from her, and then, tacked up, he just spins in the direction of the field to get back to her. On a hack, he's great until my daughter turns for home when he becomes a complete psychopath!
He follows Lizzie around the field (she's the dominant mare!) like a schoolboy with a crush on a prefect! When she's not in the field, he waits by the gate calling for her. Sounds all very sweet, but it's not!
Next week, I'm taking on my own livery yard. Having complete control of our grazing etc, we intend grazing the pair of them in separate fields (which wasn't an option at our current yard) and stable them in boxes out of site of one another.......but is this enough? Will Jimmy try to break out of his new field to get to Lizzie? I cannot describe how bad this problem is! Lizzie is fine away from Jimmy, but Jimmy is literally dangerous to ride away from Lizzie and, as many Forum members will know, my daughter is a long-term osteosarcoma survivor (adolescent bone cancer) and cannot afford to fall off and break (again!) her titanium implant. We'd hapily put him on loan (we wouldn't sell him) to a competent rider away from our yard, but we are too responsible to let him go in his current manner!
Any ideas, PLEASE!!!!???? This a serious problem - we're not "namby-pamby" wimp riders - I cannot describe how bad this problem is! Psycho horse!
In a nutshell.....
Bought him five years ago (saw him race, he never got beyond two miles, owned by friend who had "gifted" the aforementioned mare to my daughter) and he was a total "pussy cat" - I, in my advancing years
However, at this time, aforementioned mare (Lizzie) was sent off to stud. The following year, when she had her foal, she was in a field about a quarter of a mile away (all this time, our gelding, Jimmy, was well behaved). The year after that, Jimmy's hoof quality was so bad that farrier suggested we turn him away without shoes, so he was unridden. Brought back into work and he wasn't quite right. so more time off.
Basically, he's now fine and should be back in work but he's been a complete nightmare because he loves Lizzie so much he doesn't want to leave her. You have to drag him out of the field to get him away from her, and then, tacked up, he just spins in the direction of the field to get back to her. On a hack, he's great until my daughter turns for home when he becomes a complete psychopath!
He follows Lizzie around the field (she's the dominant mare!) like a schoolboy with a crush on a prefect! When she's not in the field, he waits by the gate calling for her. Sounds all very sweet, but it's not!
Next week, I'm taking on my own livery yard. Having complete control of our grazing etc, we intend grazing the pair of them in separate fields (which wasn't an option at our current yard) and stable them in boxes out of site of one another.......but is this enough? Will Jimmy try to break out of his new field to get to Lizzie? I cannot describe how bad this problem is! Lizzie is fine away from Jimmy, but Jimmy is literally dangerous to ride away from Lizzie and, as many Forum members will know, my daughter is a long-term osteosarcoma survivor (adolescent bone cancer) and cannot afford to fall off and break (again!) her titanium implant. We'd hapily put him on loan (we wouldn't sell him) to a competent rider away from our yard, but we are too responsible to let him go in his current manner!
Any ideas, PLEASE!!!!???? This a serious problem - we're not "namby-pamby" wimp riders - I cannot describe how bad this problem is! Psycho horse!