Goldenstar
Well-Known Member
My trainer has a saying with talent comes trouble something's wrong here OP needs to get to the bottom of it ASAP.
My trainer has a saying with talent comes trouble something's wrong here OP needs to get to the bottom of it ASAP.
And we're not discussing a top horse here, merely a newly broken in youngster (don't I sound like a broken record??)
As for the plug and competition horse argument. Yes its true that "competition" horses are normally more difficult than "plugs"
Sorry, that is simply not true.
No but it has the potential, nearly every top class horse has a quirk![]()
weather he is competing or not he has been produced as one,
No, he's just been broken in. Production takes months and years, not weeks.
No, he's just been broken in. Production takes months and years, not weeks.
6 weeks to break a horse, walk trot canter on both reins. After 12 weeks I would be expecting changes and able to pop a small course.
There may be a bit of that involved. He may have settled into a new routine that kept him busy - and tired. He may be missing the work and testing the boundaries. But it seems rather more than that. I suspect he may have developed ulcers due to the strict routine, lack of turnout, and perhaps rather harsh discipline. But I still think the trainer should be the first port of call. He KNOWS the horse - none of us (except the ower of course) do.
And even if his brain IS fried, I don't think immediate turning away is the way to go. He will spend the winter remembering HOW he earned a holiday!! He'll remember his last behaviours - and they're bad. He needs to be brought back into hand - kindly but firmly - and THEN be let-up forf a short while!
I'm sorry? if he weaves just put a grill up? Seriously?
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Oh and unless I witnessed all the horses weaving there I would not read anything into the fact that the boxes were fitted with anti weave grills either.