I broadly agree but the problem imho is how these things (leadership) are defined. I think ISES are trying to put to sleep the alpha 'theory' and apply learning theory over somone's misunderstood theories on herd dynamics (yes MR and PP I am looking at you).
Ours are allowed to say 'I am not happy about that daffodil Mum, it might jump out and kill me' but instead of needing to dominate and force them past an issue we can have a debate about it as they trust us enough to be proved wrong in their initial assumption.
Somebody has to be the boss. When it involves the horse, that'd be me, then.
A lot of words, very little meaning or substance. Put it another way- waffle!
They obviously haven't met a cob.
Somebody has to be the boss. When it involves the horse, that'd be me, then.
That's how it works in GS world .
I went to a very interesting talk with Ben Hart called 'Leadership without Dominance'.
It was geared to make you think and question.
I came to the conclusion I don't need to be percieved by my pony as a 'leader', what I really need to be able to to is influence her behaviour in the few hours a day I am with her.
What good is a 'leader' if you aren't there 22 hours of the day?
I know that comes accross as fluffy bunny but I would really recommend you have a look at Ben Hart's website (Hart's Horsemanship) as it poses some interesting questions and really makes you question what you want / need from your human / horse interactions.
Haha, so glad it wasn't just me
I expect any horse I have or am around to -
- Not get in my personal space or barge me in any way (that includes rubbing their head on me)
- Move out of my way when I ask, nicely
- Never attempt to deliberately hurt me
- Stand quietly when tied up
In return I -
- Respect their personal space
- Don't lose my rag with them, ever, unless presented with rude/dangerous behaviour that needs immediately correcting
- Ride to the best of my ability for them
- Give them every opportunity to 'be a horse', in terms of adequate turnout, company, and chill-out time
Horses don't need much. Just basic mutual respect and yes, leadership!
Somebody has to be the boss. When it involves the horse, that'd be me, then.
That's how it works in GS world .
A lot of words, very little meaning or substance. Put it another way- waffle!
Haha, so glad it wasn't just me
Somebody has to be the boss. When it involves the horse, that'd be me, then.
Here's a link to the original position statement which explains things more fully than the H&H summary:
http://equitationscience.com/equita...ship-and-dominance-concepts-in-horse-training
They aren't advocating not being in charge. Rather they caution against getting diverted or bogged down with the notion that horses consider us to be part of their social hierarchy.
Here is what I don't understand:
if horses have no concept of leadership, then why is it that in the wild when one particular horse decides it's time to head to the watering hole or move on to a different bit of grazing all the others follow? Is that not following a leader? Or at the very least 'Horse A has decided it's time for a drink and Horse A's decisions are generally sensible and don't lead to me coming to harm so I will follow'. (I know horses don't think in sentences, just trying to illustrate what might be happening!).
Also, when Horse A decides to make another horse move away from the watering hole with ears back etc, it does look to an onlooker as if Horse A is saying 'you are inferior to me, I will drink first and you will drink when I let you'. If that isn't what's happening then what is the purpose of Horse A moving the other horses around?
Does reading the position statement at the link I gave go any way to answering your questions?Here is what I don't understand:
if horses have no concept of leadership, then why is it that in the wild when one particular horse decides it's time to head to the watering hole or move on to a different bit of grazing all the others follow? Is that not following a leader? Or at the very least 'Horse A has decided it's time for a drink and Horse A's decisions are generally sensible and don't lead to me coming to harm so I will follow'. (I know horses don't think in sentences, just trying to illustrate what might be happening!).
Also, when Horse A decides to make another horse move away from the watering hole with ears back etc, it does look to an onlooker as if Horse A is saying 'you are inferior to me, I will drink first and you will drink when I let you'. If that isn't what's happening then what is the purpose of Horse A moving the other horses around?
Read the actual paper that fburton posted. It's much more nuanced and makes more sense than the H&H article, which is a pretty poor rendition.
The paper is disputing the idea that horses have a linear social hierarchy where A>B>C>D and as trainers/handlers, we must be seen as A. Instead, it's saying that the relationship between horses is "bilateral," meaning the horse learns who can push him off the pile of hay, and who he can push off the pile of hay. But they are saying there is no evidence that the horse maps all relationships within the herd as a hierarchy. (it's not just horses -- behaviour science for many creatures is unraveling the idea of the "pecking order" and saying it's more anthropomorphism than science). He simply knows horse B will chase him off, but horse C will run away from him, and D is his buddy who will share the hay, while E might chase B but won't chase him, which means he can stay at the hay when E is around. In other words, each relationship is individual. And those relationships can change depending on herd dynamics and resources, i.e. the horse who's the most aggressive at guarding the pile of hay might not be the same one standing by the gate chasing the others off because it wants in first. It depends on how valuable the resource is to that particular animal, as well as its personality.
Mark Rashid, one of my favourite trainers, has been saying this for years. He has said that what looks like "dominance" behaviour in domestic horses has nothing to do with herd hierarchy, but rather resource allocation. Our horses (usually) have limited access to space, water, and sometimes food, hence conflicts over those resources. This type of aggression in the wild, where space is limitless and food is underfoot, is much more infrequent. The sort of aggression wild horses display will usually be among stallions fighting over mares, or a mare defending her foal.
I also thought wild herds had a "lead mare" who told the herd where to go, but apparently the research is challenging that notion. The current studies seem to be disputing the theory that individuals have assigned roles. Instead, it's saying that researchers have documented different individuals in wild or feral herds initiating movement, leading them to surmise "leadership is not unique to a specific group member but that any horse of the group can initiate group movement."
What these researchers (and Mark as well as other trainers) are getting at is that we as trainers should not use the framework of horse A driving horse B away from a pile of hay as a model for training. They are asserting that what horse B learns from that encounter is *not* that horse A is in charge and should be respected, but rather he should be avoided. This is not the relationship we want with our horses.
I have read the study, and agree with you Caol Ila. I've had large-ish mare bands (20+ individuals with occasionally a stallion running with them), and spent many unofficial observational hours just watching how horses organise themselves which was fascinating. However as far as actually training riding horses, I don't think trying to "be" a horse is particularly useful. It just comes down to parcelling training in a way that is clear and understandable to a horse. Frightening them or being aggressive doesn't work very well.