AShetlandBitMeOnce
Well-Known Member
As a preface, I am seeking the help of a ground work professional, but there is such a wealth of experience on here that I thought it would be interesting to see what people's view of the incident would be..
So Jacob went for me yesterday in the school during a clicker training session, and when I say this I don't mean nip I mean that he went to really bite me and he meant it. He got his mouth around my side/waist and had I not been slightly quicker than he was, it could have been quite serious. I chased him off to the other side of the school after this and left him in the corner standing still, after 30 seconds or so I retrieved him and did another couple of minutes and took him back to his stable. He was fairly calm after and didn't kick out etc, went back to being himself - but I feel from him that it could escalate and he would be a horse to fight back, hence stopping these sessions until I have experienced help to help me to know what to do.
A little additional info that may be helpful to know: He is always loose with no headcollar during the sessions and they are very low pressure - I do not use/carry a whip, I have read a lot and watched a lot of videos but I am no expert at it. I also always only train after he has had his dinner, so he isn't starving. He is dominant with his field mate and has no real respect for a humans space but isn't outwardly bargey. He started to back away from the door, he stopped rubbing his face on his handler, stopped pushing forward when emptying food into his bucket and lead with a relaxed leadrope following these training sessions, but he is also not fussed about walking through you if someone is stood at the door with something interesting.
He isn't nasty on the ground, he is a very amicable and normal horse, although if you throw a rug on or do something he isn't keen on he will put his ears back and will kick out with a leg, but it will always be the leg on the other side to the human. He is as good as gold to do everything with, feet, dentist, farrier, groom etc etc. I have taken over a lot of his care now for 5 months, but bought him 3 weeks ago - he has gone from not doing much at all, to being ridden 3 x a week, to now being ridden 5 x a week. He used to throw tantrums when he didn't want to do something and still does to an extent (mainly ridden) but I can and do push him through it, and I think he has learnt from previous homes that these tantrums or threatening behaviour got him out of doing things (he was owned by a teenager who bought him for a 5 figure sum, and then ended up in a dealers yard straight from, so something went seriously wrong there and it certainluy wasn't medical).
Sorry for the essay!! Any opinions/views welcome on both causation and whether you think I dealt with it in the right way.
Happy to answer any additional questions, I have been driving myself mad wondering whether I did anything.
So Jacob went for me yesterday in the school during a clicker training session, and when I say this I don't mean nip I mean that he went to really bite me and he meant it. He got his mouth around my side/waist and had I not been slightly quicker than he was, it could have been quite serious. I chased him off to the other side of the school after this and left him in the corner standing still, after 30 seconds or so I retrieved him and did another couple of minutes and took him back to his stable. He was fairly calm after and didn't kick out etc, went back to being himself - but I feel from him that it could escalate and he would be a horse to fight back, hence stopping these sessions until I have experienced help to help me to know what to do.
A little additional info that may be helpful to know: He is always loose with no headcollar during the sessions and they are very low pressure - I do not use/carry a whip, I have read a lot and watched a lot of videos but I am no expert at it. I also always only train after he has had his dinner, so he isn't starving. He is dominant with his field mate and has no real respect for a humans space but isn't outwardly bargey. He started to back away from the door, he stopped rubbing his face on his handler, stopped pushing forward when emptying food into his bucket and lead with a relaxed leadrope following these training sessions, but he is also not fussed about walking through you if someone is stood at the door with something interesting.
He isn't nasty on the ground, he is a very amicable and normal horse, although if you throw a rug on or do something he isn't keen on he will put his ears back and will kick out with a leg, but it will always be the leg on the other side to the human. He is as good as gold to do everything with, feet, dentist, farrier, groom etc etc. I have taken over a lot of his care now for 5 months, but bought him 3 weeks ago - he has gone from not doing much at all, to being ridden 3 x a week, to now being ridden 5 x a week. He used to throw tantrums when he didn't want to do something and still does to an extent (mainly ridden) but I can and do push him through it, and I think he has learnt from previous homes that these tantrums or threatening behaviour got him out of doing things (he was owned by a teenager who bought him for a 5 figure sum, and then ended up in a dealers yard straight from, so something went seriously wrong there and it certainluy wasn't medical).
Sorry for the essay!! Any opinions/views welcome on both causation and whether you think I dealt with it in the right way.