milliepops
Wears headscarf aggressively
Don't actually know why I'm posting, perhaps for ideas, perhaps for a support group!
Anyone else have a horse that continuously zones out and goes to another place in their mind?
How do you bring them back, and are there techniques you've used to help them stay in the moment with you? as outside the box as you like!
I've figured that this is the biggest problem I have with Salty, she's a talented kind horse who wants to do the right thing but her inability to stay tuned in to me is making her quite difficult to train. It's not just a ridden thing, she does it in the stable - I can walk in to groom her and it's like she barely notices me, her eyes are glazed over and if she was a person I'd say she was daydreaming. then if you go near her with a brush she is startled and headshy. When she's working, if she's staying with me in her head, she's just a lovely horse to ride, she finds her work easy and interesting. but if something stressy takes her attention away I might as well not exist!
I think this is a learnt thing and hence I'd like to think she can learn another way eventually. I have known other horses do this to some degree, all of which have had some kind of training cock up previously. The one that she reminds me of most had a poor experience being backed by inexperienced owners and zoned out when you got him near the mounting block. He would then "wake up" when you were in the saddle and explode, so he was actually quite easy because you just had to keep him conscious during the mounting bit, then he was fine.
I know Salty has been to a yard known for stuff like waving plastic bags on sticks around etc so I think she's been flooded in the past and her way of coping with stress is to go into herself, then when she snaps back, she over reacts.
So the question is, how do I avoid that zoning out bit and teach her to work through things she finds stressful (this can be as simple as a bird in the arena) rather than check out? She knows lots of school work but when the stress bit triggers her, no amount of "keeping her busy" works at the moment, the stress response is much much stronger than my instructions.
Anyone else have a horse that continuously zones out and goes to another place in their mind?
How do you bring them back, and are there techniques you've used to help them stay in the moment with you? as outside the box as you like!
I've figured that this is the biggest problem I have with Salty, she's a talented kind horse who wants to do the right thing but her inability to stay tuned in to me is making her quite difficult to train. It's not just a ridden thing, she does it in the stable - I can walk in to groom her and it's like she barely notices me, her eyes are glazed over and if she was a person I'd say she was daydreaming. then if you go near her with a brush she is startled and headshy. When she's working, if she's staying with me in her head, she's just a lovely horse to ride, she finds her work easy and interesting. but if something stressy takes her attention away I might as well not exist!
I think this is a learnt thing and hence I'd like to think she can learn another way eventually. I have known other horses do this to some degree, all of which have had some kind of training cock up previously. The one that she reminds me of most had a poor experience being backed by inexperienced owners and zoned out when you got him near the mounting block. He would then "wake up" when you were in the saddle and explode, so he was actually quite easy because you just had to keep him conscious during the mounting bit, then he was fine.
I know Salty has been to a yard known for stuff like waving plastic bags on sticks around etc so I think she's been flooded in the past and her way of coping with stress is to go into herself, then when she snaps back, she over reacts.
So the question is, how do I avoid that zoning out bit and teach her to work through things she finds stressful (this can be as simple as a bird in the arena) rather than check out? She knows lots of school work but when the stress bit triggers her, no amount of "keeping her busy" works at the moment, the stress response is much much stronger than my instructions.