fburton
Well-Known Member
No, I would say that was very effective punishment. I certainly wouldn't condemn you for what you did.Precisely. I got him as a little handled two year old, and I treated him in the way that his mother would have treated him whenever he offered behaviour that was unacceptable around humans, and I have a Shetland that people who HATE Shetlands swoon all over when they visit me and who is safe alone with the smallest child. He tried to bite me once. I smacked his nose so quick and so hard he's never forgotten it. He has never offered to bite anyone since. Is it kinder to have told him off with my voice, waited for him to do it again and told him off again, and so on until he finally, (if he ever did, being a Shetland with all the strong will that goes with the package), got the message that it is not OK to bite people?
I would say it is largely unnecessary, and can be cruel if overdone or done unfairly. Wouldn't rule it out as an option though.Meanwhile, there will be a whole bunch of people on this forum thinking or saying that it is cruel and unnecessary to hit horses in training them,
I'm not a clicker trainer myself but have put the technique to good use on several occasions. However, I think your comment betrays a misunderstanding of how it works when done properly (i.e. horse taught, very easily, not to mug for treats).whose horses are taking a chunk out of their backsides and rifling their pockets for their clicker treat at every opportunity.
Yet one doesn't need to reprimand very often, surely?Horses speak the language of a quick physical reprimand and then immediate reward for desired behaviour. If its good enough for them its good enough for me.