coreteam1
Well-Known Member
My horse has become seriously spooky at the moment. He's ok hacking out but when he is in the school/arena he is awful
We will be trotting around and then he spooks, quite violently and enough to unseat me. I find myself hanging on for dear life sometimes! lol
We came back to walk the other day and he did it, so fast that I had no chance of staying on, I landed softly with him looking down at me as it to say ''What''?
I had a lesson yesterday (third lesson with this trainer) and would have loved to have started off with a stretchy long and low neck but the beast had other ideas. I had to take a firm (but not strong
) contact and push him straight into trot as he just kept spooking.
We have a 20 x 40 arena and sometimes it sees impossible to go to the 'C' end of the school which faces out across fields. There is also a 3ft dyke surrounding two sides of our arena which are homes to trolls and things not quite imaginable
There were monsters in both corners from 'H' and 'M' and he certainly wasn't comfortable going past 'E' !!!!
So we concentrated on collecting his canter on a 20 metre circle at A and then the trainer said lets go down the other end!!!!!!!
She stood in the corner between M and C and I walked him down. He was jumpy but ok. So then the serious work started
Into a small Jiggy Joggy trot (not a working trot but a manageable, slightly faster than walk, collected trot, to get him listening) and we did some 10 metre circles with quarters in and out to get him listening to me rather than looking to spook at gremlins.
We then increased the circles to 20 meters and then started doing some leg yields. Then some leg yields from the safety zone of 'A' to the scary end at 'C', remember though the trainer is still stood at the scary end and I have him well into my hand but pushing him forward from my leg, every step!
We then went on to do some shoulder in along the long sides and Traver. He was a star. No spooky moments (apart from a genuine spook at a large German Shepherd (dog, not a German man shepherd
) but it was containable due to him being in Traver and being held between hand and leg.
There wasn't the tension he had at the start of the lesson and at the safe end. He was having to work hard, listen to me.
I think the spooking with the majority of horses like this can be some sort of evasion. My trainer says my boy is doing it with me to find out how far he can go, how far he can push me. He wasn't tired by the time we got to the scary zone, the difference was that he was being asked to work and it took his mind off being naughty and spooky.
Someone mentioned in a previous thread about professional competition horses not spooking at major competitions, as much as ours amateur grass roots riders. It's true, and their horses are probably a lot more highly strung than ours, so what's their secret? I think it's all about riding correctly, into enough of a contact and being pushed into this from the leg, not being behind the leg and being given work that makes them concentrate.
It might not work for every spooky horse but I thought I'd pass on this advice as it seems to be working for me.
The first photo, he is hurried and tense

IMG_6332 by
This is where we are talking about going into scary zone!!!
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/32105456@N06/5351419377/]
IMG_6324 by
I know he is on the forehand here but he felt so much better (by this I mean less tense) than the start. We wwere doing walk to canter, then back to trot, leg yield and then shoulder in. Keeping his mind with me
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/32105456@N06/5473118617/]
IMG_6349 by http://www.flickr.com/people/32105456@N06/
We will be trotting around and then he spooks, quite violently and enough to unseat me. I find myself hanging on for dear life sometimes! lol
We came back to walk the other day and he did it, so fast that I had no chance of staying on, I landed softly with him looking down at me as it to say ''What''?
I had a lesson yesterday (third lesson with this trainer) and would have loved to have started off with a stretchy long and low neck but the beast had other ideas. I had to take a firm (but not strong
We have a 20 x 40 arena and sometimes it sees impossible to go to the 'C' end of the school which faces out across fields. There is also a 3ft dyke surrounding two sides of our arena which are homes to trolls and things not quite imaginable
So we concentrated on collecting his canter on a 20 metre circle at A and then the trainer said lets go down the other end!!!!!!!
She stood in the corner between M and C and I walked him down. He was jumpy but ok. So then the serious work started
We then increased the circles to 20 meters and then started doing some leg yields. Then some leg yields from the safety zone of 'A' to the scary end at 'C', remember though the trainer is still stood at the scary end and I have him well into my hand but pushing him forward from my leg, every step!
We then went on to do some shoulder in along the long sides and Traver. He was a star. No spooky moments (apart from a genuine spook at a large German Shepherd (dog, not a German man shepherd
There wasn't the tension he had at the start of the lesson and at the safe end. He was having to work hard, listen to me.
I think the spooking with the majority of horses like this can be some sort of evasion. My trainer says my boy is doing it with me to find out how far he can go, how far he can push me. He wasn't tired by the time we got to the scary zone, the difference was that he was being asked to work and it took his mind off being naughty and spooky.
Someone mentioned in a previous thread about professional competition horses not spooking at major competitions, as much as ours amateur grass roots riders. It's true, and their horses are probably a lot more highly strung than ours, so what's their secret? I think it's all about riding correctly, into enough of a contact and being pushed into this from the leg, not being behind the leg and being given work that makes them concentrate.
It might not work for every spooky horse but I thought I'd pass on this advice as it seems to be working for me.
The first photo, he is hurried and tense

IMG_6332 by
This is where we are talking about going into scary zone!!!
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/32105456@N06/5351419377/]

IMG_6324 by
I know he is on the forehand here but he felt so much better (by this I mean less tense) than the start. We wwere doing walk to canter, then back to trot, leg yield and then shoulder in. Keeping his mind with me
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/32105456@N06/5473118617/]

IMG_6349 by http://www.flickr.com/people/32105456@N06/