PurBee
Well-Known Member
From your post Nancy (if this isn’t how it happened and the post writing got muddled, then what I’m going to say will be irrelevant)
“Sometimes, before giving him his feed, I ask him to step back and he'll step back no problem.
Today I gave him his feed and he looked a little grumpy. I asked him to step back, he then went ears flat back and refused to move..”
From his point of view, ‘the way it’s always been done before’ is you ask for him to step back, then give the food and he steps forward to have it (reward maybe seen in his mind).
To then that day you give him food (reward), and then ask for him to step back, is not what you’ve taught him, ‘not the way it’s done’ - and he got (over the top) annoyed and aggressive.
Evidently it’s a full-out extreme reaction to commands and rewards being ‘done in the wrong order than before’ - but it does show he’s the type that will learn ‘a method’ and it completely throws him when that method isn’t followed always, as taught.
And unfortunately due to him being historically aggressive with food, explains to a degree why he became so aggressive.
Whenever you’ve put food down before after asking for a step back, he’s been allowed to step forward and have it. This ‘flipped script’ of asking for step back after food is given, potentially flipped his brain.
My gelding is a bit similar with a militant-style learning brain. He’s not aggressive like Ozzy because it’s not at meal times, but in any training, he’s so keen to figure out what I’m asking. Gets very pleased when he gets it. Will then demonstrate his learning with super-fast compliance. But if I were to change any bit about what he’s learnt, he gets in a fizz, ears back, agitation…”this isn’t how we do it” reaction to an established ‘ask’.
Now, if my gelding had a history of harsh training before me, he would likely then bite me, to back me off him when he gets it ‘wrong’ for fear of whips or whatever triggered him before. But as that’s not his history, he’s just mildly annoyed/frustrated because he seems to prefer strict routine and has a militant learning style mild.
With him strict consistency keeps us both in good spirits, yet with my mare, she’s not bothered one jot if I get ‘asks’ wrong, or the order of things, she’s flexible/tolerant/easy.
Although my mare sank her teeth into me when I first got her!…but that was with a foal at foot, and she was scared protecting a foal without her herd she had before, and new home changes etc. lots of reasons for her aggressive behaviour back then due to fear mainly. I was pulling open a hay flake in front of them eating from the floor, like many times before, and bend half down to spread the hay for her and foal and she just launched forward into my shoulder, fast and hard. I shot upright and instinctively raised my arms, clapped hard, yelled “no! Back! back! back!” While stomping forward into her space, while she backed up speedily at my reaction. Then lead her to the food again, stood in front, she was chill, I left, and she never did use her teeth on me again. But she was a sweet mare before, these were unusual circumstances for her, she was stressed.
It’s so horrible to have set-backs like this, and you’re both doing remarkably with Ozzy, bringing him so far along. Obviously repeated biting aggression needs serious thought about future plans, without hesitation, if a horse cannot learn, it’s problematic to even be able to care for it without risk. You don’t sound you’re there yet, but if any understanding can be got from the incident to understand his particular personality and reactions, and managed to be lessening over time, you never know, he may well be a real softy eventually.
Once I get scared and confidence burst, I don’t like being around them, they sense my nerves. My OH’s calm relaxed no matter what happens energy, has helped me several times!
I hope you heal quickly and confidence returns soon. Hugs xx
“Sometimes, before giving him his feed, I ask him to step back and he'll step back no problem.
Today I gave him his feed and he looked a little grumpy. I asked him to step back, he then went ears flat back and refused to move..”
From his point of view, ‘the way it’s always been done before’ is you ask for him to step back, then give the food and he steps forward to have it (reward maybe seen in his mind).
To then that day you give him food (reward), and then ask for him to step back, is not what you’ve taught him, ‘not the way it’s done’ - and he got (over the top) annoyed and aggressive.
Evidently it’s a full-out extreme reaction to commands and rewards being ‘done in the wrong order than before’ - but it does show he’s the type that will learn ‘a method’ and it completely throws him when that method isn’t followed always, as taught.
And unfortunately due to him being historically aggressive with food, explains to a degree why he became so aggressive.
Whenever you’ve put food down before after asking for a step back, he’s been allowed to step forward and have it. This ‘flipped script’ of asking for step back after food is given, potentially flipped his brain.
My gelding is a bit similar with a militant-style learning brain. He’s not aggressive like Ozzy because it’s not at meal times, but in any training, he’s so keen to figure out what I’m asking. Gets very pleased when he gets it. Will then demonstrate his learning with super-fast compliance. But if I were to change any bit about what he’s learnt, he gets in a fizz, ears back, agitation…”this isn’t how we do it” reaction to an established ‘ask’.
Now, if my gelding had a history of harsh training before me, he would likely then bite me, to back me off him when he gets it ‘wrong’ for fear of whips or whatever triggered him before. But as that’s not his history, he’s just mildly annoyed/frustrated because he seems to prefer strict routine and has a militant learning style mild.
With him strict consistency keeps us both in good spirits, yet with my mare, she’s not bothered one jot if I get ‘asks’ wrong, or the order of things, she’s flexible/tolerant/easy.
Although my mare sank her teeth into me when I first got her!…but that was with a foal at foot, and she was scared protecting a foal without her herd she had before, and new home changes etc. lots of reasons for her aggressive behaviour back then due to fear mainly. I was pulling open a hay flake in front of them eating from the floor, like many times before, and bend half down to spread the hay for her and foal and she just launched forward into my shoulder, fast and hard. I shot upright and instinctively raised my arms, clapped hard, yelled “no! Back! back! back!” While stomping forward into her space, while she backed up speedily at my reaction. Then lead her to the food again, stood in front, she was chill, I left, and she never did use her teeth on me again. But she was a sweet mare before, these were unusual circumstances for her, she was stressed.
It’s so horrible to have set-backs like this, and you’re both doing remarkably with Ozzy, bringing him so far along. Obviously repeated biting aggression needs serious thought about future plans, without hesitation, if a horse cannot learn, it’s problematic to even be able to care for it without risk. You don’t sound you’re there yet, but if any understanding can be got from the incident to understand his particular personality and reactions, and managed to be lessening over time, you never know, he may well be a real softy eventually.
Once I get scared and confidence burst, I don’t like being around them, they sense my nerves. My OH’s calm relaxed no matter what happens energy, has helped me several times!
I hope you heal quickly and confidence returns soon. Hugs xx