AengusOg
Well-Known Member
Still havent answered my question re biting horse though???
What would you do?
Still havent answered my question re biting horse though???
Well I would do what another, higher-up-the-pecking-order horse would do, which is retaliate, not necessarily overly violently, but certainly very forcefully and possibly loudly, and also possibly involving the use of a stick since I don't have ears to lay back, teeth big enough to make an impression, nor hind hooves - all of which I have seen mummy horses use on their bang out-of-order little darlings.
Well I would do what another, higher-up-the-pecking-order horse would do, which is retaliate, not necessarily overly violently, but certainly very forcefully and possibly loudly, and also possibly involving the use of a stick since I don't have ears to lay back, teeth big enough to make an impression, nor hind hooves - all of which I have seen mummy horses use on their bang out-of-order little darlings.
Agree entirely with cortez & jftds posts. Following aengus' logic a mare would only discipline a youngster because she'd misread the original signals or put the youngster in a situation it had no choice but to misbehave. Body language goes a long way, but same as with another horse, if my body language is ignored or challenged, I'll back it up.
I completely disagree with aengus' view that horses misbehave solely as a result of mishandling. I think it is inevitable for horses to offer an incorrect response at some stage during training, regardless of the quality of that training. Very few horses are capable of providing the correct response at all times, and very few horses are capable of controlling their own natural responses which tend towards the physical. When the incorrect response is potentially dangerous, I feel that a swift reprimand is the only safe approach.
I do agree that good handling is about reading the horse and the signals he gives, but I don't believe that a forceful (not violent or aggressive) response is necessarily a result of mis-reading those signals. In my opinion, a well timed, sharp response in a horse whose motivation for misbehaviour is not fear or physical discomfort, is the appropriate response and derives from skilled reading of the horse.
I don't have a view that horses misbehave solely as a result of mishandling.' You're putting words into my mouth, again.
You should have learned from our last encounter that I don't expect horses to give correct responses consistently, and how I feel about responses as opposed to reactions, and how I feel about creating resistance in horses during training.
You do remember this, http://chathighlands.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=training&action=display&thread=2630&page=2 ,don't you?
I have even kicked him once, I was putting fly repellent on him last year and he lashed out at me - no warning - I kicked him back. He has never done it again and I can assure you he isn't scared of me in the slightest
Conditioning cubes....eek they sent my boy nuts when he was a baby and he wasn't been worked!!
I haven't made the same mistake with my new baby but my mum fed him a small hanfull of pasture mix just once and the next day he showed me how high he could rear and how he could shake his head like the others and lift me off the ground !!
He hasn't had it again and hes good as gold by that i mean hes good most days but if hes had a bad day he is one moody little bugger!!![]()
He is just young, its just a phase but it may also be to do with how much feed your giving him my lipizzaner just lives on fresh air and a bit of grass and has a bit off chaff when iv handled him!and he seems to be surviving with the huge gut he has on him!
I completely disagree with aengus' view that horses misbehave solely as a result of mishandling. I think it is inevitable for horses to offer an incorrect response at some stage during training, regardless of the quality of that training. Very few horses are capable of providing the correct response at all times, and very few horses are capable of controlling their own natural responses which tend towards the physical. When the incorrect response is potentially dangerous, I feel that a swift reprimand is the only safe approach.
I do agree that good handling is about reading the horse and the signals he gives, but I don't believe that a forceful (not violent or aggressive) response is necessarily a result of mis-reading those signals. In my opinion, a well timed, sharp response in a horse whose motivation for misbehaviour is not fear or physical discomfort, is the appropriate response and derives from skilled reading of the horse.