Devonshire dumpling
Well-Known Member
I need inspiration..... Can you tell me your experiences of stable panic, rearing over doors... rearing on the walls etc, and how you handled it? Thanks
Biggest change though came when I was gifted a shettie as his companion....he's worth his weight in gold that little thing! Good luck.
When you were bringing him in over the summer, did you build up the time he spent alone (without entertaining hard feed)?
Best approach is to bring in, leave stable, and as long as horse is quiet, return straight away and reward. Leave stable, wait a few seconds, and if horse is quiet, return and reward. Repeat, extended the time a little, and do say 5 each day. Key thing is... you must try to work within the window beforenhorse starts to get unsettled, and if he does get unsettled after a few seconds, try to wait a few seconds more until he stops moving/whinnying/creating a fuss, then return straight away. You want him to learn that being quiet and calm is what brings you back/gets him a reward/gets him out of the stable again.
At the moment, he's getting so wound up that you have to go back/remove him for his own safety, so he's learning that leaping around=getting out again.
This is not the same as leaving him to thrash it out... this can work, but carries the risk that, because the horse has never learned that stables are good places, you get the slightest thing out of sequence or upset, and you're back to square one. The key is to reward calm, and not expect him to be calm for long at the beginning, so start small[/QUOTE
I need to step back a bit to let you know what he was like....
We got him in January as feral, living in a herd, we spent 3 mths to get a halter on him through patience and kindness and 4000 packets of extra strong mints, we then sedated him and moved him in a trailer to this yard, he spent first few weeks on his own in the field because the mares tried to kill him, and he was happy with that, he couldn't touch them, they were 3 fields away, but could call them and see them, he came to us as pack leader and went from feral to calm, he is the most nicest well behaved horse you could ever meet, he knows boundaries, he knows not to step into my space and is mannerly, we have done alsorts with him over the summer, we popped him in the stable daily for a feed and because no grill up , and he did rears infront of the stable we felt we couldn't leave him alone, he was chilled in there and we got him out as soon as he finished grub, we have groomed him in the stable picked out feet etc all good, but no never built up time as we felt unsafe with no top door.
Roll on to last 2 weeks, we have popped up grill and boarded up side of walls to roof height with plyboard, he does have quiet moments in there, and we ignore all rears, the min he goes quiet for 10 - 15 mins we get him out on a good note. last week it was 45 mins rearing and 15 mins asleep and before he kicked off again we took him out. last 2 sessions we have said ok he can stay in longer, he can't get out, so let him get on with it, we have done 2.5-3 hrs and he got no better! Again took him out only when he was quiet. Perhaps you are right, perhaps we need to start over again with mini sessions. He will have to winter out on his own by night tho as the girls are elderly and need to come in, he will have them by day... again, i don't care about that as he has been on his own loads in the field and he's fine. There isn't any rush to stable him, I just feel he needs to learn as a smaller 2.5 yr old than a great bit 5 yr old!