Weezy
Well-Known Member
My new boy has serious issues when asked to go up to the school alone. The hack to the school is about 500 metres up a lane. We manage to get a certain distance and then he freezes and he physically cannot make himself go any further. He holds his breath, gulps air and is, IMO, honestly traumatised by it. He will back up onto the verge (it is as though he doesn't feel safe on the tarmac) and there we stand. I will not let him back up any further as there is a fence with an electric strand and a drop behind said verge. I have tried booting him, etc, but he just stands there. Person in question thinks I should let him back into the electric fence or fall down the drop....I am afraid I value my life and his too much to let this happen
He is getting better and I have no doubt that I will crack it, but I have been told that it is me and I need to beat it out of him. If he was napping, spinning, trying to go back to the yard, I would possibly agree that he is just being a git, but this is very different. If I lead him up the road he is marginally better and I get him there, but he doesn't breath much. I have legged a couple of friends up on him and walked alongside and this works but he is still hesitant. I told said person that quite frankly if this is the only bad thing about him, that I have to lead to the school, then so be it.
He is now going up the tracks alone and starting to breath and almost relax, it is a work in progress and I am 100% he has gastric issues as the air gulping leads me to this conclusion. He will be put on Coligone this week to see if it helps matters.
He is hesitant about being led anywhere he does not know, it is almost as though he just doesn't have a brave gene, but he will jump anything LOL!
So, naughty or genuine fear? Do you agree that some horses just do not trust themselves to hack alone? Or do you think that he needs a good beating? I think some horses just cannot stomach hacking alone and are genuinly petrified of the tigers lurking in the bushes
Luckily I have a friend who is off work for 4 days next week who is going to help me go up and down the road a million times. Oh and he is not so bad with another horse, and I am now managing to walk back to the yard aboard, even though it is not in a relaxed manner! He is 9 and always been on a pro yard, so never done hacking before.
He is getting better and I have no doubt that I will crack it, but I have been told that it is me and I need to beat it out of him. If he was napping, spinning, trying to go back to the yard, I would possibly agree that he is just being a git, but this is very different. If I lead him up the road he is marginally better and I get him there, but he doesn't breath much. I have legged a couple of friends up on him and walked alongside and this works but he is still hesitant. I told said person that quite frankly if this is the only bad thing about him, that I have to lead to the school, then so be it.
He is now going up the tracks alone and starting to breath and almost relax, it is a work in progress and I am 100% he has gastric issues as the air gulping leads me to this conclusion. He will be put on Coligone this week to see if it helps matters.
He is hesitant about being led anywhere he does not know, it is almost as though he just doesn't have a brave gene, but he will jump anything LOL!
So, naughty or genuine fear? Do you agree that some horses just do not trust themselves to hack alone? Or do you think that he needs a good beating? I think some horses just cannot stomach hacking alone and are genuinly petrified of the tigers lurking in the bushes
Luckily I have a friend who is off work for 4 days next week who is going to help me go up and down the road a million times. Oh and he is not so bad with another horse, and I am now managing to walk back to the yard aboard, even though it is not in a relaxed manner! He is 9 and always been on a pro yard, so never done hacking before.