LadyGascoyne
Still Fig-uring it out...
I do confess to bellowing “SLOWLY” at mine when they come galloping up. They do listen 
I agree but I also think if you take it too far, you deny that an animal has a personality. Like people, they can be having an off day and behave like a total shit or have a good day and behave beautifully, however you want to describe it.
OH had a horse I always described as polite. He was a naturally big striding horse. I have health problems and he would always adapt his walk to my pace. He was an expert at escaping from his stable as soon as the door was opened but YM said he had never once knocked over a member of staff while doing it, unlike most regular escape artists. He seemed to regard it as an amusing game.
A horse at the riding school we went to would often grab the hose as she was being washed and turn it on the person hosing her. Again, the only motive for this seemed to be for her amusement. Not being naughty, just having fun.
I said less competent. I obviously wouldn’t hire and let anyone incompetent handle my horses.
I promise you Mim is not fearing for her life.
Ooh, I don’t mind sassy as a description. Sometimes they simply are sassy. I don’t mean it in a derogatory way, but you sometimes have days when you can tell as soon as you see them that they have ‘something about them’. Be that being cheeky, bouncy, contrary whatever. You just have to adapt your plans and approach to work with the horse you have in front of you.Speak kindly to your little pony and soothe him when he wheezes or he may turn his back and you kick you were he pleases.
Hate horses being called it and don’t like sassy.
Mine may occasionally get called a donutbut in an affectionate way.
Maybe spirited or presence are better words! Feel like a new thread for vocabulary changes!Ooh, I don’t mind sassy as a description. Sometimes they simply are sassy. I don’t mean it in a derogatory way, but you sometimes have days when you can tell as soon as you see them that they have ‘something about them’. Be that being cheeky, bouncy, contrary whatever. You just have to adapt your plans and approach to work with the horse you have in front of you.
Like these a lot!Opinionated - Offering answers
Stubborn - Committed to a plan
Lazy: Energy conserving
Sharp - sensitive and decisive
Mareish/grumpy: expressive and articulate
Ooh, I don’t mind sassy as a description. Sometimes they simply are sassy. I don’t mean it in a derogatory way, but you sometimes have days when you can tell as soon as you see them that they have ‘something about them’. Be that being cheeky, bouncy, contrary whatever. You just have to adapt your plans and approach to work with the horse you have in front of you.
Or a 'lovely model' which seems to be the in thing at the moment on horse ads. That annoys the hell out of me.I hate to see ponies & horses referred to as a machine. They’re not a jumping machine or a rosette machine.
Oscar was a 'Little Toad' for lots of intellgient opportunism moments that left my daughter eating dirt.
That is a disturbing turn of phrase. Horses aren't "kit". Skis are "kit". I guess for me, the limit is if I would use the phrase on my friends. E.g. teasing that I would expect to be understood as teasing. My horse doesn't know the difference (other than tone), but I do.I’ve seen in a lot of ads recently ‘a great piece of kit’ - it angers me SO much. No wonder people think they’re just something to use and upgrade or toss away and replace when no longer winning rosettes for them.
It makes you wonder what’s happened or who’s influenced this persons equestrian journey to go from being a horse-mad kid that we all started as (and many of us still are as adults!) to calling the animals we all adore so much an ‘it’ or ‘piece of kit’
I think lots of it comes from removing emotions from the situation so it’s easier to ignore what they’re telling us.