x_Fiona_x
Member
This is my first post, I hope its in the right place 
I bought a rising 4yo mare just over a year ago. I bought her believing she had been broken and had a balanced walk, trot and canter and had started pole work, but had had the winter off since. The lady had no facilities to try her so I could only hack her down the road and back. She seemed to have a lovely nature, was well within my budget and the lady seemed to be trust worthy so I bought her.
I first got on her a few days after she came, having allowed her to settle in. I soon realised the balanced walk, trot and canter was a rubbish, in fact if I hadnt seen a picture of her being ridden I would not have believed she had been backed. She planted her feet and refused to move, without either getting a smack with the whip,being threatened with it- I dont usually believe in whips - or being led. This is something we have worked on and now I very rarely have to use the whip, though I still carry it, and her trot is balanced - her outline has improved greatly- and her canter is certainly getting there.
The problem we have yet to solve is she kicks. She has kicked the water trough off the wall, her boredom lick off the wall, made several holes in the wood, and at one point kicked a load bearing wall and almost knocked the whole stables down. This has now progressed into kicking the fence in the field. We have started giving her Wendals Moody Mare which has cut down the amount of kicking she does during the night, however she still kicks first thing in the morning, which means my mum gets up early just to let her out to stop her damaging the stable. When she kicks the fence in the field we either go out and take her in or give her hay. I know this is playing right into her hands but if we dont we have the stables and the fence to fix. Im stuck between a rock and a hard place and the only option I can see is to sell her, but the thought of this breaks my heart as apart from her kicking she is a great mare with loads of potential. Ive possibly bit off more than I can chew, but I didnt know enough about her before I bought her and I certainly wont make that mistake again.
I bought a rising 4yo mare just over a year ago. I bought her believing she had been broken and had a balanced walk, trot and canter and had started pole work, but had had the winter off since. The lady had no facilities to try her so I could only hack her down the road and back. She seemed to have a lovely nature, was well within my budget and the lady seemed to be trust worthy so I bought her.
I first got on her a few days after she came, having allowed her to settle in. I soon realised the balanced walk, trot and canter was a rubbish, in fact if I hadnt seen a picture of her being ridden I would not have believed she had been backed. She planted her feet and refused to move, without either getting a smack with the whip,being threatened with it- I dont usually believe in whips - or being led. This is something we have worked on and now I very rarely have to use the whip, though I still carry it, and her trot is balanced - her outline has improved greatly- and her canter is certainly getting there.
The problem we have yet to solve is she kicks. She has kicked the water trough off the wall, her boredom lick off the wall, made several holes in the wood, and at one point kicked a load bearing wall and almost knocked the whole stables down. This has now progressed into kicking the fence in the field. We have started giving her Wendals Moody Mare which has cut down the amount of kicking she does during the night, however she still kicks first thing in the morning, which means my mum gets up early just to let her out to stop her damaging the stable. When she kicks the fence in the field we either go out and take her in or give her hay. I know this is playing right into her hands but if we dont we have the stables and the fence to fix. Im stuck between a rock and a hard place and the only option I can see is to sell her, but the thought of this breaks my heart as apart from her kicking she is a great mare with loads of potential. Ive possibly bit off more than I can chew, but I didnt know enough about her before I bought her and I certainly wont make that mistake again.