Birker2020
Well-Known Member
At the last yard I was at they had a very small indoor school which was about 20m in diameter. It was great for doing ground work in and I did quite a lot with my horse at one time. I did join up work and he picked it up very quickly. When he went to a Monty Roberts demo as a demo horse for a loading problem, Monty was amazed how quickly he joined up with his man in the roundpen and asked if I had done this type of work with him before. He's always acted the same way, ear on the handler, slowing down of pace, licking and chewing before joining up.
The last time few times I lunged him and made him halt in order to change the rein I noticed he was licking and chewing. I always keep my sessions brief, 20 mins max or 30 mins if trot poles are involved and always work on a really long rein to avoid the problems of tight circles with very little canter work involved. The horse moves freely, swings through his back, his tail is long and relaxed and he is allowed to stretch (I don't use any gadgets just a dually and lunge line)
I took this licking and chewing at the time to mean many things, submission, relaxation, understanding of what was required of him, affection, trust, etc and assumed it was just an extension of join up. However I recently read that it can also mean that the horse has visbily relaxed because he has had the 'pressure' taken off him and this is referred to in a human context as 'stress management'.
Does anyone else agree with this theory? Does anyone elses horse do this on the lunge?
The last time few times I lunged him and made him halt in order to change the rein I noticed he was licking and chewing. I always keep my sessions brief, 20 mins max or 30 mins if trot poles are involved and always work on a really long rein to avoid the problems of tight circles with very little canter work involved. The horse moves freely, swings through his back, his tail is long and relaxed and he is allowed to stretch (I don't use any gadgets just a dually and lunge line)
I took this licking and chewing at the time to mean many things, submission, relaxation, understanding of what was required of him, affection, trust, etc and assumed it was just an extension of join up. However I recently read that it can also mean that the horse has visbily relaxed because he has had the 'pressure' taken off him and this is referred to in a human context as 'stress management'.
Does anyone else agree with this theory? Does anyone elses horse do this on the lunge?