Orchardbeck
Well-Known Member
Ok, I've been reading up on ettiquette for hunting and suchlike, and one of the pointers is to ensure your horse has manners, specifically, ensuring it does not kick out at other horses.
Is it actually possible to teach a horse not to kick out at others? Or is the only way to deal with this behaviour to ensure that you take steps to avoid it happening in the first place, ie wearing a red ribbon in its tail, keeping to the back, verbally warning those around you, avoiding confined spaces with others around, not taking it out if it is in season/particularly grouchy/at all?!!
A few years back I was riding my mare at a Common Riding rideout (a Borders thing, bit like hunting but without a fox/runner). My mare can sometimes (and I mean only sometimes) be funny with other horses, so I dutifully wore the red ribbon in her tail, and warned other people, keeping to the back of the ride as well as I could, even though others were joining at different spots. Anyway a young boy (aged 4) who had previously been on a lead rein for the rideout the week before, proceded to push past me on the inside (we were riding past a stone wall on a road at the time) and my mare lashed out at him. She didn't actually touch him, but the boy's father was riding about two horses in front of me and gave me the biggest b******ing, really swearing at me.
I was really upset about this as I had warned the boy to pass on the outside (once I had realised what he was doing) where there was plenty of room, and my mare had also been perfectly behaved for every other rideout so far - I had even swapped horses on a different ride with a poor girl whose mare kept bucking her off down hills, to give her her confidence back (more fool me!). Anyway, I was so embarrassed that it had happened, so much so I didn't want to go to any others, but everyone round me said it wasn't my fault, that the boy should still have been on the leadrope etc and how rude the father had been. But was it my fault?
Anyway, back to my original question, is it possible to teach a horse not to kick?
Is it actually possible to teach a horse not to kick out at others? Or is the only way to deal with this behaviour to ensure that you take steps to avoid it happening in the first place, ie wearing a red ribbon in its tail, keeping to the back, verbally warning those around you, avoiding confined spaces with others around, not taking it out if it is in season/particularly grouchy/at all?!!
A few years back I was riding my mare at a Common Riding rideout (a Borders thing, bit like hunting but without a fox/runner). My mare can sometimes (and I mean only sometimes) be funny with other horses, so I dutifully wore the red ribbon in her tail, and warned other people, keeping to the back of the ride as well as I could, even though others were joining at different spots. Anyway a young boy (aged 4) who had previously been on a lead rein for the rideout the week before, proceded to push past me on the inside (we were riding past a stone wall on a road at the time) and my mare lashed out at him. She didn't actually touch him, but the boy's father was riding about two horses in front of me and gave me the biggest b******ing, really swearing at me.
I was really upset about this as I had warned the boy to pass on the outside (once I had realised what he was doing) where there was plenty of room, and my mare had also been perfectly behaved for every other rideout so far - I had even swapped horses on a different ride with a poor girl whose mare kept bucking her off down hills, to give her her confidence back (more fool me!). Anyway, I was so embarrassed that it had happened, so much so I didn't want to go to any others, but everyone round me said it wasn't my fault, that the boy should still have been on the leadrope etc and how rude the father had been. But was it my fault?
Anyway, back to my original question, is it possible to teach a horse not to kick?