Horse shocked on electric fence - now won't catch!

QueenT

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Our gentle gelding had his nose/mouth in the electric fence a week ago - that day it took five adults (yard staff) to get a hold of him so he could get in from pasture. The following two days he stayed in and was all jittery, and acted as if touching him shocked him again, and of course very sensitive around his head. Once on a lead he is super easy, well-mannered and no probs with riding. We had him vet checked just to be sure, nothing wrong there. But we still can't catch him when he's off the rope. He is in a small paddock now, so we have a tiny chance of getting hold of him, even so, I don't think having several people corner him everyday is a good solution. So I called in one of these horsemanship-cowboy-trainers (brilliant man!) He agreed that the horse does not act scared or traumatised anymore, but has clearly realised that running wild is a lot more fun, and the experience has probably triggered a flight response associated with people - apparently that's fairly normal. 32 minutes, and the horse was following the cowboy like a lap dog. So, when I did it yesterday it took me close to 2,5 hours, but at the end of it he stood still and let me hook the halter. I take that as some form of success, and I know that these things can take a long time to retrain - still, I am exhausted by the thought of having to do this every day for the next long period. The yard staff has bailed on getting him in, and I understand that, they can't spend that long on one horse. Have any of you experienced anything like this, and how did you resolve it? Thanks!
 
I think you maybe need to be a bit patient. He hurt himself only a week ago and it clearly made quite an impact at the time. Just go say hi and offer him a treat instead of trying to catch him and bring him in
Yes, well, we tried that. He won't take treats and feed if anyone is holding it. Patience is probably the problem here...
 
If he's ina paddock by himself, take hiim a bucket of somethng he likes, let him eat it and take the bucket away again, without trying to catch him. And for goodness sake don't let the yard staff make such a drama out of a small incident No wonder he has decided he likes the fuss.
Thanks, I really like the idea of taking the drama out of it. He'll get over it. I think the yard staff had me all psyched up as well, and feeling guilty that my horse is not behaving ...(although I think I channeled my inner cowboy well yesterday...;-)
 
So yeah, just be patient he got a shock. Hes had some stranger come chase him round, hes been cornered by his carers, hes been chased by you. Just go in the paddock and hang out with him for a bit. If hes generally good to catch that will settle soon enough
 
So yeah, just be patient he got a shock. Hes had some stranger come chase him round, hes been cornered by his carers, hes been chased by you. Just go in the paddock and hang out with him for a bit. If hes generally good to catch that will settle soon enough
It all makes sense, but as I am not allowed to leave him outside overnight, I do have to get him in a some point every day. At my old yard (small, self-service) we could just have left the gate open until he was good and ready to go in, and would probably just have followed his mates. I sorely miss that now.
 
Ouch, not fun. I know your pain of not being able to catch! If hes in a small field by himself I'd set up a small pen, you can walk him into and catch him calmly with no issues or just give his feed etc in that pen.

I did this for my gelding, within about 3 times of herding him into the pen, he learnt he was going to be caught so hes just given up.
 
Patience is the key! I was bringing my mare in from the field (usually switch the electric off but this time i hadnt so made a mental note to be extra careful. just as i was opening the gate, she decided to sniff the gate handle and got a mains shock right on the end of the nose (I could have cried I was so annoyed with myself). It took about 3 weeks until she trusted anyone near the fence gate again.
 
Windandrain is right. Just take the time necessary to catch him quietly now, you may be amazed how quickly things will improve once he realises he is never going to win. A very good lesson for any horse to learn.
 
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