tired&frustrated
New User
I'm posting under a different account.
I've got a problem and it's getting worse. I bought a delightful little mare a few months ago, and she's perfect in every way except she cannot be caught in the field at all! Her old owner failed to mention this, although at her old home she used to just get a gate opened so she could walk into the stables.
She's the most vile little mare in the field. She's out with 5 of YO's horses (2 broodmares, a 35+ year old gelding, a 2 year old filly and another mare)
To cut a long story short, she won't let anyone near her in the field. If I try to walk near her then she gallops off, if I try to bribe her with feed, haylage, mints, carrots etc then she gallops off, if I hide the leadrope in my pocket as if I'm going to pat her then she gallops off. Even if I just stand at the field and stare at her she gallops off. I just don't know what to do anymore.
The average time for getting her in is 40 minutes with lots of people helping, although it's been known to be as long as 2.5/3 hours.
My current strategy is to bring one of the broodmares and the elderly gelding to the gate and normally the other broodmare will follow. Then try and get the filly (she's got dodgy legs so you've got to go very slowly) who is also my mare's best friend at the moment and then chase my mare and trap her at the top of the field. This doesn't always work as she's too fast, and she just barges into the other horses and knocks them out of the way to get away from me. It doesn't matter if it's rain, hail or shine; she never wants in.
She becomes accustomed to my strategies after a short time, so I need to keep changing what I do which is a major pain.
She is also turned out with a headcollar on, but she gets the filly to take it off her!
We've got a brilliant relationship out of the field but she's a completely different horse in the field
Someone told me the only way I can solve this problem is by doing Parelli and obviously I'm like
ERR NO!
She even goes as far as chasing away whatever horse I'm trying to bring up in order to catch her! Most recently it was the elderly gelding who she had galloping around the field and he was clearly suffering which I thought was disgusting
but I can't exactly control how she acts in the field unfortunately.
Any suggestions on what to do are welcome, I just have no idea what to do anymore!
I've got a problem and it's getting worse. I bought a delightful little mare a few months ago, and she's perfect in every way except she cannot be caught in the field at all! Her old owner failed to mention this, although at her old home she used to just get a gate opened so she could walk into the stables.
She's the most vile little mare in the field. She's out with 5 of YO's horses (2 broodmares, a 35+ year old gelding, a 2 year old filly and another mare)
To cut a long story short, she won't let anyone near her in the field. If I try to walk near her then she gallops off, if I try to bribe her with feed, haylage, mints, carrots etc then she gallops off, if I hide the leadrope in my pocket as if I'm going to pat her then she gallops off. Even if I just stand at the field and stare at her she gallops off. I just don't know what to do anymore.
The average time for getting her in is 40 minutes with lots of people helping, although it's been known to be as long as 2.5/3 hours.
My current strategy is to bring one of the broodmares and the elderly gelding to the gate and normally the other broodmare will follow. Then try and get the filly (she's got dodgy legs so you've got to go very slowly) who is also my mare's best friend at the moment and then chase my mare and trap her at the top of the field. This doesn't always work as she's too fast, and she just barges into the other horses and knocks them out of the way to get away from me. It doesn't matter if it's rain, hail or shine; she never wants in.
She becomes accustomed to my strategies after a short time, so I need to keep changing what I do which is a major pain.
She is also turned out with a headcollar on, but she gets the filly to take it off her!
We've got a brilliant relationship out of the field but she's a completely different horse in the field
Someone told me the only way I can solve this problem is by doing Parelli and obviously I'm like
She even goes as far as chasing away whatever horse I'm trying to bring up in order to catch her! Most recently it was the elderly gelding who she had galloping around the field and he was clearly suffering which I thought was disgusting
Any suggestions on what to do are welcome, I just have no idea what to do anymore!