Amy567
Well-Known Member
My family and I did exactly this, we had a ex RS horse on working livery at the RS and decided to get me a pony and move 200 miles away to our new house with our own land. We were clueless, we got the local PC instructor (who only lived about 5 miles away) to come and help us with learning how to tie up and lead etc, because the RS had done it all before hand. My sister knew how to do some things, such as tack up, lead, tie up etc, the basics, and she managed to help me. But we were 6 and 9 at the time. I also had no riding lessons until I had had the pony for about 6-8 months, when we finally joined the PC. So I've been in this womans' shoes before. We were completely stupid to go it alone after such a short period of time, but it also taught us a lot in a much shorter time than having someone else do everything for us.
My advise, from being in your shoes before, is for you to lead said pony, as you are doing.
Don't be afraid to give it a slap with the end of the lead rope or a hand if it tries to bite/kick/barge. It has to learn it cannot get away with it.
Stop feeding treats
Get a small shetland, mine both cost about £200 each and cost us £15 every 12 weeks for a trim and wormer, v. cheap little ponies to keep (just don't give them too many carrots and too much grass). Horses are herd animals, if the pony doesn't get on with said company, you can sell a little shetland pretty quickly as a companion
And keep getting an instructor in to help you.
You're heading in the right direction, you just need that little extra push to get on track with the pony
My advise, from being in your shoes before, is for you to lead said pony, as you are doing.
Don't be afraid to give it a slap with the end of the lead rope or a hand if it tries to bite/kick/barge. It has to learn it cannot get away with it.
Stop feeding treats
Get a small shetland, mine both cost about £200 each and cost us £15 every 12 weeks for a trim and wormer, v. cheap little ponies to keep (just don't give them too many carrots and too much grass). Horses are herd animals, if the pony doesn't get on with said company, you can sell a little shetland pretty quickly as a companion
And keep getting an instructor in to help you.
You're heading in the right direction, you just need that little extra push to get on track with the pony