Wagtail
Horse servant
I used to think so, but have since changed my mind. It looks barbaric and nasty, and does not work on every horse, but actually, I think it is a very useful and not unpleasant experience for the majority of horses that undergo it. Times when I have had to use it are:
Clipping
Shoeing (very rarely)
Injections
I have one horse on the yard who dos not allow you to clip him. He is not scared (believe me, I know him that well). Just doesn't want you to do it. He will not let you do anything he can't see the point of. Even if I am just pointing out where he is too fat, he will get nasty! (Maybe I need to be more tactful!) Anyway, he will actually hold his nose out for the twitch and then goes into a sort of contented trance when it is applied and let me clip him. I keep it on no longer than ten minutes with a couple of minutes break before reapplying. One day, he had been so good for clipping after the first ten minutes of twitching I thought I'd try the clippers without. He tried to double barrel me! I reapplied the twitch and he stood like a lamb.
Second horse needs twitching for clipping as she is genuinely scared of the clippers. The twitch works to a certain extent but does not work anywhere near as well as wth the first horse.
My gelding had to be twitched the first couple of times when he was shod behind. It worked, but left him angry afterwards. Now though, I just have to keep him occupied with treats and he's fine.
So I guess twitching is not a good option for all horses, and they all react differently to it. But it is now not on my list of 'cruel' things we subject horses to. What do others think?
BTW re the clipping, if it were my horse I would try clicker training first, but when clients aren't prepared to put in the time to do it themselves and you have to clip their horse, then twiching is my only option when a horse is violently opposed to it. (With the owner's consent of course).
Clipping
Shoeing (very rarely)
Injections
I have one horse on the yard who dos not allow you to clip him. He is not scared (believe me, I know him that well). Just doesn't want you to do it. He will not let you do anything he can't see the point of. Even if I am just pointing out where he is too fat, he will get nasty! (Maybe I need to be more tactful!) Anyway, he will actually hold his nose out for the twitch and then goes into a sort of contented trance when it is applied and let me clip him. I keep it on no longer than ten minutes with a couple of minutes break before reapplying. One day, he had been so good for clipping after the first ten minutes of twitching I thought I'd try the clippers without. He tried to double barrel me! I reapplied the twitch and he stood like a lamb.
Second horse needs twitching for clipping as she is genuinely scared of the clippers. The twitch works to a certain extent but does not work anywhere near as well as wth the first horse.
My gelding had to be twitched the first couple of times when he was shod behind. It worked, but left him angry afterwards. Now though, I just have to keep him occupied with treats and he's fine.
So I guess twitching is not a good option for all horses, and they all react differently to it. But it is now not on my list of 'cruel' things we subject horses to. What do others think?
BTW re the clipping, if it were my horse I would try clicker training first, but when clients aren't prepared to put in the time to do it themselves and you have to clip their horse, then twiching is my only option when a horse is violently opposed to it. (With the owner's consent of course).
Last edited: