Brightbay
Well-Known Member
She has had nothing but positive associations from us, we feed her, we scratch her itchy bits, we rug her when cold, we unrug her when warm. She is not fleeing from us scared out of her wits, shes walking/trotting off with her ears up and her tail out.
This needs to be sorted as if she becomes injured or unwell and doesnt catch then it could mean serious issues for her.
She may well have nothing but positive associations with you, but she clearly has very negative associations with headcollars
Your description sounds like a pony with a major conflict - she wants to approach because you seem nice and bring food, but at the same time, you're holding a headcollar and that's signified not nice stuff in the past.
Your best bet is to completely change her associations with the headcollar, so that it means good things not bad. Do you know how to teach a horse to target something? It can work very well if you teach them to target the headcollar: not only do they learn that touching (and eventually putting their own nose into) the headcollar means rewards, but they also form new positive associations with both the headcollar and the person doing the training. A friend has used this approach on a difficult to catch SectionB, who eventually galloped across the field towards her when she rattled the headcollar.
The chasing/join up does work, but if you put yourself in the ponies' shoes, think how they view the person doing the chasing... You can find it works a few times, then you have problems again if you don't keep up the approach. So you have pony who'll give in 80% of the time, but you still have a problem for the remaining 20% (as a poster above has acknowledged


