AdorableAlice
Well-Known Member
Why not just let the foal be a foal. That carrot stick needs to go where the sun does not shine.
Because as a species we are generally arrogant and determined to interfere with nature and dominate it
Poor baby.
This is the problem I have with encouraging people, who may not have the necessary skills, to mess about with stuff they've seen on TV and get the impression is "dead easy". It may be dead easy to do, but it is also dead easy to get wrong.Foals are full faculty learners. Totally different to dogs, cats, monkeys and people.
Putting a rope round in a figure of 8, I presume that's what they were doing allows you to move the foal by in effect pushing from behind without just putting a head collar on and pulling it about, as often happens. Foals quickly get the idea in minutes, if you get it right, then they lead about like veterans. Dead easy, quick and fairly stressless. Parelli does teach this, but it is in fact old western way of getting foals nice and gentle. It works a treat on weanlings as well which is handy if you get a foal at six months.
This is the problem I have with encouraging people, who may not have the necessary skills, to mess about with stuff they've seen on TV and get the impression is "dead easy". It may be dead easy to do, but it is also dead easy to get wrong.
Well call me wrong, I teach my youngsters to lead on a figure of 8 rope from birth. Before I ever put a head collar on. I find they learn a lot easier than a standard headcollar and preassure, and it stops them pulling back and possibly damaging their neck.
I put things round their girth line.
I pick their feet up as soon as they are able, touch them all over
I put rugs on them
lead them over all sorts of spooky things, tie flappy things to the fence.
All without stressing them
I get a lot of compliments on how easy my babies are, they are not scared of people or stressed, and often as witnessed by people come up.
I spend a lot of time just being there, offering lovings, maybe sitting with them when they lay down, and generally being no threatening.
But yes, I insist on manners even for the lovings, politness.
And I do no more than 10 mins at a time, as I believe parelli wouldnt.
Agh... So what. Not your foal they're messing with.
If people want to play with foals let them...
- why do they[ Parelli, I H , whatever ,take your pick a) have to make things complicated b) pretend new/their ways are the only answer?
So if I wanted to stick my finger in a filly foal's every orifice, you'd be happy with that? Not that I would; I hate Miller's 'imprint training'. But it would be my foal I'm messing with, after all. Or does 'play' not extend to that? Where do you draw the line?Agh... So what. Not your foal they're messing with.
If people want to play with foals let them...
I think making them subservient, feel they mustn't/can't resist anything is the aim.Leaving aside the names involved what interests me is that the approach and others like it - esp. the orifices stuff!! sounds like it makes the foal pretty subservient.
Although you need to be able to do all sorts to horses, surely occasionally you should ask permission. It shows a lack of respect otherwise - which sounds a bit fluffy and I apologise, but it's easy to get foals to be easy to handle, especially if the mare is good also, and surely all you need to do is get them happy to be touched all over, pick up feet, catch, lead and go on the lorry etc - willingly. Why the neccessity to truss them up like a chicken and stick your fingers up their bum.
Just a thought about this. Surely getting the mare happy to be handled is a basic before breeding from her? What if something went wrong? Obviously semi ferals are a different matter but then they are unlikely to get handled when young foals.especially if the mare is good also,
Is there a link to this site? ?
So if I wanted to stick my finger in a filly foal's every orifice, you'd be happy with that? Not that I would; I hate Miller's 'imprint training'. But it would be my foal I'm messing with, after all. Or does 'play' not extend to that? Where do you draw the line?
In case this wasn't tongue in cheek. It's not fburton that's the weirdo it's the thinking and actions involved in much of the imprint training he linked.Look, fburton, you weirdo, what you do with your foals orifices is none of my business. I may not be ok with it but whatever tickles your fancy love...