I am obviously a horse beater...

I competed my 29 year old for years (mainly teamchasing & cross country). She was a honest & keen jumper & I can only remember her stopping twice, as she was such a genuine horse I thought that she did it for good reason (either pilot error or maybe she's been spooked by something I hadn't seen)
Each time I gave her a pat & represented her at the jump & she always jumped it staight way. Not being punished for stopping never didn't have any detrimental effects on her jumping.
If a honest horse puts in a stop I'd always give it the benefit of the doubt.
A lazy or ungenuine horse is a differnt matter .
 
I've just seen your post TicTac, I also don't carry a whip, I don't even own one.
I would always be very reluctant to strike any living creature, although I don't do it I don't have a problem with a smack and I do realise there's a world of difference beween a smack & a beating.
There are people on my yard who do carry whips & use them but they certainly aren't abusing their horses; it's just differnt to how I do things.
It could be because my Dad was a alcoholic who used to lash out fequently so I decided that I have no right to stike any other creature.
I lost my rag with my girl once & I still feel guilty about it 20 years later.
 
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I was sooooooo embarassed when he picked his way one foot at a time over a 2'6" gate in a working hunter class....... he cleared it without a touch but we didn't get many marks for style........

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P.S We do that.
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2'9 workers. Big scary sheep fillers, chicken statues and water trays. And the terrifying Kalli-eating purple flowers. So we trotted up to each on, ground to a halt, had a sniff then dantily hopped over each from a stand still. Didn't clip a thing either
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Oh he didn't hop from a stand still, although he often does, this time he picked over it, one leg at a time, like that Thellwell cartoon with the caption "a careful clear" he's a big maxi cob (clydie cross possibly) and he was soooooo dainty, everyone was wetting themselves with laughter, except me..... I was just bright red!
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Bless him he loves his jumping, he's just not very good at it!
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Shorter crops hit harder, hence why jockeys are very short. It means you can do one short sharp one (at least, that's what I think the reasoning is). I guess that's why the bSJA have a minimum and maximum lengths for whips.

However, I think the main reason is to stop the whip catching the jump wing sending the whole lot crashing down
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you could try a goldfish in his water bucket or trough? and a treat when he doesnt do what he is asked!! i would smack mine hard once if it stopped and wasnt out of its comfort zone!
 
brighthair - I have to say I think you are spitting against the wind over this one. Couldn't believe some of the things I read
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e.g If a horse bites you then you need to look at what is causing it to do this and not punish it for doing so
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My filly decided to try nipping me yesterday while we were on our daily walk
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She was trying to dominate me and I wasn't having it. First time I told her no very firmly. 2nd time she got growled at and pushed away firmly. 3rd time the baggage got a quick tap on her muzzle. Needless to say she didn't do it again.

At 13.1hh at 13 months old I am putting manners in place now as don't fancy being hauled around by a bolshy horse standing at about 15 hh with no manners

Sorry I think I've drivelled on long enough
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but totally agree with you on your view of disciplining a horse
 
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brighthair - I have to say I think you are spitting against the wind over this one. Couldn't believe some of the things I read
crazy.gif

e.g If a horse bites you then you need to look at what is causing it to do this and not punish it for doing so
shocked.gif


My filly decided to try nipping me yesterday while we were on our daily walk
mad.gif
She was trying to dominate me and I wasn't having it. First time I told her no very firmly. 2nd time she got growled at and pushed away firmly. 3rd time the baggage got a quick tap on her muzzle. Needless to say she didn't do it again.

At 13.1hh at 13 months old I am putting manners in place now as don't fancy being hauled around by a bolshy horse standing at about 15 hh with no manners

Sorry I think I've drivelled on long enough
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but totally agree with you on your view of disciplining a horse

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yup head - brick wall
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brighthair - I have to say I think you are spitting against the wind over this one. Couldn't believe some of the things I read
crazy.gif

e.g If a horse bites you then you need to look at what is causing it to do this and not punish it for doing so
shocked.gif



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I think it comes down to knowing your horse though - for example, I used to ride two ponies. One was nippy, and would take a chunk out of you for no reason (back, teeth, saddle etc all checked)- so if he bit he got told off (I personally found a good hard poke on the end of his nose quite effective as it had shock value but each to their own).

The other never bit, ever - so when he got nippy it was looked into and we found he was in pain due to his girth really pinching. We changed the girth and the nipping stopped.

If a horse suddenly started behaving in an out of character way, I would look for the cause first.
 
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