shellonabeach
Well-Known Member
I'm very upset tonight and would be very grateful for any advice. Apologies in advance but this is going to be long...
I have 3 horses, 16.2 ISH mare aged 11, 14.2 welsh x TB gelding aged 21 and a Shetland cross mare aged approx 25 they live in a closed herd with my friends 15hh cob mare aged 16 on a yard we rent.
They have all lived together for 3 years, the herd order is 1) 16.2 mare 2) 14.2 gelding 3) 15hh cob 4) Shetland cross (the 16.2 was the last in and previous to that the gelding was the boss). The 16.2 and 14.2 are rather passive bosses and rule by face pulling or if pushed they will run at the others face pulling or leg wave but never bite or kick out. The cob can be mean to the Shetland and has tried to bite her and kicked out and regularly chases her but this is managed by making sure the Shetland cannot be cornered etc
They all live out 24/7 all year round, in the summer all 4 live together and in the winter my 3 are together with the cob separate (she has a dust allergy and needs to be kept differently to the others). In the summer we feed out in the field and have never had a problem, they have a routine, get their buckets put down in herd order with no fighting or bother. The bigger 3 all groom together and they all sleep together etc and are generally a happy little herd.
My friends cob has always been difficult when it comes to new horses, she cannot be hacked with new horses as she is a nightmare, and when my 16.2 mare arrived she was very aggressive, kept the Shetland in the hedge at the bottom of the field for a couple of weeks to keep her away from the new arrival and spent 2 months trying to double barrel my big mare through the fence. We cannot have friends horses come on the yard as the cob mare gets very difficult.
My gelding went to a friends house for the weekend just gone to keep her 3yr old filly company when she took her older mare away for the weekend.
My gelding was very happy to come home last night, I popped him in a small paddock with my big mare they had a sniff and a squeal and all fine. Put them back in the main paddock with the cob and the Shetland and the cob was a bit silly with him, barging into his space, squealing turning her bottom on him but all just seemed a overly flirty.
Fast forward to tonight I go to feed and find the cob is keeping my gelding away from the gate (they normally all wait quietly by the gate). I put down teas in odd order of 1) 16.2, 2) cob, 3) gelding, 4) Shetland and before the Shetlands bucket was on the floor the cob was chasing my gelding off his bucket (hers still full). I then stood guard over him and his tea with the cob running circles around him trying to bully him off his food. Once tea was over she proceeded to chase him all over the field and any time he stood still she turned her bottom on him and tried to double barrel him. He didn't stand up for himself at all. This went on for about half an hour.
I got so upset that I had to ask my friend to put the cob on her own in the winter field. She thinks the cob has come into season due to my gelding coming home, she is a tart bless her and used to come into season whenever she hacked out with a gelding but hasn't shown any seasons for at least a couple of years (hasn't hacked with any new geldings and wasn't interested in my gelding after she had lived with him for a couple of months!)
Now I'm at a loss as to where we go next. We have had no problems with reintroductions after winter. I have told my friend if the herd order doesn't go back to how it was with the 16.2 and the gelding at the top then the horses will have to be kept separate as I am not prepared to risk my gelding getting injured, the cob is fully shod and is IMO a nasty bully. I'm hoping a few days with my other 2 will see him getting his mojo back and the cob calming down.
Of course if we get them back together I will be worried about taking him away again (was planning a long weekend at the beach next month).
Apologies again for the length and if you have already read this on another forum!
Has anyone had a similar situation? Any words of advice, wisdom or general reassurance would be great.
I have 3 horses, 16.2 ISH mare aged 11, 14.2 welsh x TB gelding aged 21 and a Shetland cross mare aged approx 25 they live in a closed herd with my friends 15hh cob mare aged 16 on a yard we rent.
They have all lived together for 3 years, the herd order is 1) 16.2 mare 2) 14.2 gelding 3) 15hh cob 4) Shetland cross (the 16.2 was the last in and previous to that the gelding was the boss). The 16.2 and 14.2 are rather passive bosses and rule by face pulling or if pushed they will run at the others face pulling or leg wave but never bite or kick out. The cob can be mean to the Shetland and has tried to bite her and kicked out and regularly chases her but this is managed by making sure the Shetland cannot be cornered etc
They all live out 24/7 all year round, in the summer all 4 live together and in the winter my 3 are together with the cob separate (she has a dust allergy and needs to be kept differently to the others). In the summer we feed out in the field and have never had a problem, they have a routine, get their buckets put down in herd order with no fighting or bother. The bigger 3 all groom together and they all sleep together etc and are generally a happy little herd.
My friends cob has always been difficult when it comes to new horses, she cannot be hacked with new horses as she is a nightmare, and when my 16.2 mare arrived she was very aggressive, kept the Shetland in the hedge at the bottom of the field for a couple of weeks to keep her away from the new arrival and spent 2 months trying to double barrel my big mare through the fence. We cannot have friends horses come on the yard as the cob mare gets very difficult.
My gelding went to a friends house for the weekend just gone to keep her 3yr old filly company when she took her older mare away for the weekend.
My gelding was very happy to come home last night, I popped him in a small paddock with my big mare they had a sniff and a squeal and all fine. Put them back in the main paddock with the cob and the Shetland and the cob was a bit silly with him, barging into his space, squealing turning her bottom on him but all just seemed a overly flirty.
Fast forward to tonight I go to feed and find the cob is keeping my gelding away from the gate (they normally all wait quietly by the gate). I put down teas in odd order of 1) 16.2, 2) cob, 3) gelding, 4) Shetland and before the Shetlands bucket was on the floor the cob was chasing my gelding off his bucket (hers still full). I then stood guard over him and his tea with the cob running circles around him trying to bully him off his food. Once tea was over she proceeded to chase him all over the field and any time he stood still she turned her bottom on him and tried to double barrel him. He didn't stand up for himself at all. This went on for about half an hour.
I got so upset that I had to ask my friend to put the cob on her own in the winter field. She thinks the cob has come into season due to my gelding coming home, she is a tart bless her and used to come into season whenever she hacked out with a gelding but hasn't shown any seasons for at least a couple of years (hasn't hacked with any new geldings and wasn't interested in my gelding after she had lived with him for a couple of months!)
Now I'm at a loss as to where we go next. We have had no problems with reintroductions after winter. I have told my friend if the herd order doesn't go back to how it was with the 16.2 and the gelding at the top then the horses will have to be kept separate as I am not prepared to risk my gelding getting injured, the cob is fully shod and is IMO a nasty bully. I'm hoping a few days with my other 2 will see him getting his mojo back and the cob calming down.
Of course if we get them back together I will be worried about taking him away again (was planning a long weekend at the beach next month).
Apologies again for the length and if you have already read this on another forum!
Has anyone had a similar situation? Any words of advice, wisdom or general reassurance would be great.