AdorableAlice
Well-Known Member
Ted has a go faster stripe, sorry for delay in updating, that four letter word 'work' got in the way.
We had a lovely time when David, Teds breaker came over. Ted has become ever more tricky to get on board and we could not decide if he was being a yob or if something was actually bothering him. I dreaded telling David because the one thing that Ted had excelled at whilst being broken was standing rock still through the leaning over/getting on process, and then I get the horse home and wreck the good work !
It was so obvious Ted had remembered David and I thought to myself, 'just wait, Ted will be an angel at the block'. He wasn't and I was rather relieved. Ted gets anxious at the block, he seems to want to get going quickly, so whilst he will stand for a few seconds that is it and he is off, there is no back up/girthiness or offer to buck, just a 'we're off' reaction.
David's answer to the problem was to fool the horse a little by taking him to the block and doing everything bar getting on. He was allowed to walk around the block as many times as he wanted to until he stood still, then a foot was put in the iron and removed regardless of whether the horse stood or moved. It took 20 minutes but Ted did twig he has to stand properly before anything else was done. it was fascinating to watch, no force, reprimands or voice control, Ted had to work it out for himself and when he did and was mounted and asked forwards from the block David immediately got off and made a fuss of him. This was repeated a few times before we went for a hack. Obviously it won't be an instant fix but at least I now have to tools to deal with it. I have always maintained that Ted was thick, very wrong, and David said he thought Ted was one of the most intelligent horses he has dealt with.
We hacked out and met a hedge cutter which Ted ignored and on our return David got off onto the block and repeated the get on/off another couple of times whilst Ted stood like a statue. Then we moved onto the clippers, the horse was hot so not ideal, but all I wanted to achieve was for him to accept the clippers on him, any coat removed would be a bonus. The horse was tied outside and I went to put him inside. David said no leave him outside and untie him. I asked why and the reasoning was, if Ted wants to leave let him, don't trap him with walls where he will feel dominated and frightened. Ted's default has always been to leave the scene.
So with the rope slack David started the clippers and allowed Ted to sniff them. The horse sighed, rested a leg and put his chin on David's shoulder and the clipping began on Ted's chest. Not a murmur out of the horse, until I took the clippers and he turned his eyes to watch me with a little bit of fear in his eye. I finished his little bib clip with the clippers going into his jowl area and between his front legs.
He was hacked out yesterday, went to the block and stood still and quiet. He went to a local school and was dismounted and remounted whilst there again standing still.
I strongly believe we never stop learning as horse owners/handlers but this horse and David make me feel like I know nothing despite over 35 years of ownership. There is still a long way to go before Ted and I will have a partnership but I am determined it will happen and it is lovely to have so many people interested in a furry carthorse and a windy 50 + owner.
We had a lovely time when David, Teds breaker came over. Ted has become ever more tricky to get on board and we could not decide if he was being a yob or if something was actually bothering him. I dreaded telling David because the one thing that Ted had excelled at whilst being broken was standing rock still through the leaning over/getting on process, and then I get the horse home and wreck the good work !
It was so obvious Ted had remembered David and I thought to myself, 'just wait, Ted will be an angel at the block'. He wasn't and I was rather relieved. Ted gets anxious at the block, he seems to want to get going quickly, so whilst he will stand for a few seconds that is it and he is off, there is no back up/girthiness or offer to buck, just a 'we're off' reaction.
David's answer to the problem was to fool the horse a little by taking him to the block and doing everything bar getting on. He was allowed to walk around the block as many times as he wanted to until he stood still, then a foot was put in the iron and removed regardless of whether the horse stood or moved. It took 20 minutes but Ted did twig he has to stand properly before anything else was done. it was fascinating to watch, no force, reprimands or voice control, Ted had to work it out for himself and when he did and was mounted and asked forwards from the block David immediately got off and made a fuss of him. This was repeated a few times before we went for a hack. Obviously it won't be an instant fix but at least I now have to tools to deal with it. I have always maintained that Ted was thick, very wrong, and David said he thought Ted was one of the most intelligent horses he has dealt with.
We hacked out and met a hedge cutter which Ted ignored and on our return David got off onto the block and repeated the get on/off another couple of times whilst Ted stood like a statue. Then we moved onto the clippers, the horse was hot so not ideal, but all I wanted to achieve was for him to accept the clippers on him, any coat removed would be a bonus. The horse was tied outside and I went to put him inside. David said no leave him outside and untie him. I asked why and the reasoning was, if Ted wants to leave let him, don't trap him with walls where he will feel dominated and frightened. Ted's default has always been to leave the scene.
So with the rope slack David started the clippers and allowed Ted to sniff them. The horse sighed, rested a leg and put his chin on David's shoulder and the clipping began on Ted's chest. Not a murmur out of the horse, until I took the clippers and he turned his eyes to watch me with a little bit of fear in his eye. I finished his little bib clip with the clippers going into his jowl area and between his front legs.
He was hacked out yesterday, went to the block and stood still and quiet. He went to a local school and was dismounted and remounted whilst there again standing still.
I strongly believe we never stop learning as horse owners/handlers but this horse and David make me feel like I know nothing despite over 35 years of ownership. There is still a long way to go before Ted and I will have a partnership but I am determined it will happen and it is lovely to have so many people interested in a furry carthorse and a windy 50 + owner.