Walrus
Well-Known Member
Hello,
So Bobby-Fell is settling in. He's been (mostly) a very good boy. We've been walking in-hand in the school with floodlights and over a pole and that's gone well. Dentist came last week to rasp his teeth so a week ago he had a bit in (he has been bitted before as he was shown in-hand). This week he has been for a walk in-hand round some fields (nice off road hacking at my yard!) and also long reined for about 2-3 minutes up a straight track heading towards home. All good.
Today we tried long reining, the real thing. We started off quite well - toddled off down the track away from the yard, took a right along the edge of a stubble field, then we got to another field corner, I asked his to go left and instead we went right, sideways like a crab. More steering and encourgement to go forwards resulted in a little buck, fell pony tantrum and then a wobbly walk in the right direction. He then stopped to take in the scenery (not exactly part of the plan but ok), when I asked him to walk on he ignored me so I tweaked the rein a little to get his attention. We carried on and at the bottom of the field I tried to turn round to go back the way we came, not so good. Cue fell pony tantrum number two including head waving, a nice couple of bucks and attempting to trot in the wrong direction. He got pulled up and we reorganised but we couldn't turn without a fair bit of resistance. In the end I went to his head and lead him most of the way back, then on the straight track that forms the last 100m or so before the yard I long reined him up there. No problems until we got to the yard and he zoned into a nice grass patch and we went that way - but that's cope-able with, we often look like Thelwell!
So my question is, with my one pair of hands, how do a teach pony to steer. I'm not going to be heavy handed, and even moderate pressure on the reins just makes him do a typical fell pony "stick head on chest and be a bulldozer". He has been long reined by previous owners 18 months ago (in fact he was sat on and lead round). He's 4.5 and I've had him 3 weeks. There's no rush and my very experienced friend is hopefully coming to play very soon for an afternoon to give me some tips (well, she thinks she's coming for tea and cake!).
Part of me thinks it would be easier to get on him, then I could use legs, open the rein to steer etc. instead of having what seems to be one command when long reining (pull rein).
Any hints and tips for establishing power steering?
Cheers.
(sorry it's long I got carried away! I have teddy bear shaped crisps to offer!!)
So Bobby-Fell is settling in. He's been (mostly) a very good boy. We've been walking in-hand in the school with floodlights and over a pole and that's gone well. Dentist came last week to rasp his teeth so a week ago he had a bit in (he has been bitted before as he was shown in-hand). This week he has been for a walk in-hand round some fields (nice off road hacking at my yard!) and also long reined for about 2-3 minutes up a straight track heading towards home. All good.
Today we tried long reining, the real thing. We started off quite well - toddled off down the track away from the yard, took a right along the edge of a stubble field, then we got to another field corner, I asked his to go left and instead we went right, sideways like a crab. More steering and encourgement to go forwards resulted in a little buck, fell pony tantrum and then a wobbly walk in the right direction. He then stopped to take in the scenery (not exactly part of the plan but ok), when I asked him to walk on he ignored me so I tweaked the rein a little to get his attention. We carried on and at the bottom of the field I tried to turn round to go back the way we came, not so good. Cue fell pony tantrum number two including head waving, a nice couple of bucks and attempting to trot in the wrong direction. He got pulled up and we reorganised but we couldn't turn without a fair bit of resistance. In the end I went to his head and lead him most of the way back, then on the straight track that forms the last 100m or so before the yard I long reined him up there. No problems until we got to the yard and he zoned into a nice grass patch and we went that way - but that's cope-able with, we often look like Thelwell!
So my question is, with my one pair of hands, how do a teach pony to steer. I'm not going to be heavy handed, and even moderate pressure on the reins just makes him do a typical fell pony "stick head on chest and be a bulldozer". He has been long reined by previous owners 18 months ago (in fact he was sat on and lead round). He's 4.5 and I've had him 3 weeks. There's no rush and my very experienced friend is hopefully coming to play very soon for an afternoon to give me some tips (well, she thinks she's coming for tea and cake!).
Part of me thinks it would be easier to get on him, then I could use legs, open the rein to steer etc. instead of having what seems to be one command when long reining (pull rein).
Any hints and tips for establishing power steering?
Cheers.
(sorry it's long I got carried away! I have teddy bear shaped crisps to offer!!)