CaitlinCal
Well-Known Member
amymay- yeah he was fine to hack out until about 3 moths ago 
amymay- yeah he was fine to hack out until about 3 moths ago![]()
What is the ground like that you're heading for when he naps?
Hi I've had lots of great advice on the forum for my issues hacking out with my mare - who can be very nervous of all those scary things - leaves etc and can spin round - just like everyone says riding positively helps - I've just come back from a much better ride todayI find that trotting on stops her having so much time to think, gets nervous and spin (as she can at walk) - so that might helps as well. Confronted some alpacas today - just a little spin and snort!
Ah missed that it was a nap prior to going in to the school.
So my concussion is that your horse doesn't want to go in to the school for two reasons:
1. Bored, and resentful of (possibly) too much school work;
2. Has an undetected lameness problem that causes discomfort when ridden on a surface.
So I wouldn't go in all guns blazing with whips and spurs until you've established which.
My boy napped going in to school, and coming out, napped going out of stableyard, napped going one route and another, nothing to do with sick of schooling, all to do with lack of bottle on behalf of rider. He is fine now, lots of schooling by stronger, more determined, rider.Ahhhh I missed the going in the school. Dont go in the school. My horse hated it but was excellent on a hack. You can school any horse on a hack whilst out too. Thats what I use to do. Too many schools around these days and horse might have gone stale.
That is the problem:little_ mouse is a "wee courin timrous beastie" [Robert Burns].
You need to "man up" take no prisoners, let him know you are the boss, a good "welly in the belly" sorts most of them.
You decide where you are going, and at what pace.
Best to stick with friends, or get a friend to ride him for you, if not get lessons, but no more fluffy bunny huggin for him!
Don't try to figure him out, it won't work, get him going forward off the leg, on the aid, on the mark.