The Ozzy Diaries

Oh that is so kind of you! is it a comb-type thing with a razor, or one of the rake (tail thinner) type things?
I've got the rake but he didn't seem to like it as it must have pulled a little.


Clicker is on order!
I just click my tongue - it works fine, it's always there when you need it and you've still got both hands free!
 
I just click my tongue - it works fine, it's always there when you need it and you've still got both hands free!
I thought about this, but OH has been using a 'click' sound as part of groundwork for a cue meaning 'move on'. I've tried making various other sounds but not sure anything would work!
I suppose the advantage of the clicker (I think it was £3 for 2 of them) is that it will make a consistent sound regardless of which one of us is using it.
Will be attempting the leg washing on Wednesday. Watch this space!
 
Putting my rambling nerd hat on…

Clicking at a horse (to get them to move on, for example) is normally an alveolar or alveolar lateral click. If you want to make a separate click sound with your mouth, you can do a palatoalveolar click (so the top of your tongue is further towards the back of your mouth), which sounds more like a ‘clock’/‘cluck’ sound. My boy distinguishes between the two clicks with no issues.

Benefit of marker words is you can tailor them to a situation a bit more, make them softer/more excited/etc, so it’s easier to make them a ‘reward’ in themselves whereas a click is always a click and should always be followed up by an eternal reward. But I prefer clicker work for handling stuff where the animal already has a negative history, since it makes it easier to be more clinical and precise.

Strictly speaking, you don’t want a secondary reinforcer (like a clicker or marker word) with counter conditioning which is partially what you’re doing. But then you just get into the semantics of am I trying to counter condition (initially meaning leg touch predicts treat) or am I trying to train a behaviour (keep legs still when I touch them), and that’s a whole ‘nother rabbit hole to go down.

What I will say though is, if you’re going down the clicker route, make sure you have a few clicker sessions with him before you introduce the leg washing. You want to figure out the logistics of what you’ll be doing (are you treating by hand or throwing into a bowl; what reinforcer will you use - what works best for him); introduce the basics to him (e.g. that a click means a reward is coming, that he doesn’t come into your space when being rewarded, maybe he looks away); and get to grips with your own mechanics and timing (e.g. do you like having a clicker or would you rather have that hand free and use a whistle or sound from your mouth) way before you introduce potentially major stressor of leg washing.
 
I haven't read all the posts, only yours about the clipping. I had this problem with one of mine. He was a total old woman about clipping, took several years to even get to a chaser clip. Couldn't use vet sedation as he needs a twitch to get into the vein and I save that for "special" occasions. Then he got cushings and got a VERY long coat and even longer curly hair on his legs which got matted etc with sweat. Even on prascend he couldn't shed so it all had to come off, even his legs to his total horror.

I used the livery harmony plus which were very quiet. There was no way I could clip his legs in anything like the normal way, elbows down were forbidden territory. So I stood him loose (in a headcollar) in the yard. Nothing for him to fight against. Clipped an area he was happy with for a couple of sessions to get going with it.
Then clipped downwards rather than upwards against the hair. Did each leg each session, about 3 sessions a day. Success was one short clip down from elbow to knee. If we only managed 2 inches that was fine. Aim was 2 downwards stokes a leg be it an inch or 6 inches whatever we could manage. Tell him how good he was and moved onto the next leg. We gradually got further down, probably due to boring him to death. When I got to the knee I didn't do much in case that upset him just another run down below it to get the really hairy bit, maybe only a couple of inches. Just carried on and was basically "hacking" the long fur off. After a couple of weeks of this I could clip upwards and make it look "nice" and he was a normal horse.

Just a couple of runs down a leg for only a couple of inches removed any chance of a battle. It was done so quickly and it just became a "habit' like picking feet out.
Clipping downwards is a lot safer for you and you can get away more quickly than with scissors.

I had to get the rest of his very long cushings coat off like between his hind legs, near the sheath etc. I did all of that with the harmony clippers. Before I had clipped with normal lister battery clippers but the harmony were brilliant for a difficult horse.
 
My advice on the CPL is it can wait a couple of weeks if you haven't felt any skin folds. Clipping the legs to get a good view of the current state would be an advantage to long term management but spend the time to the vet visit just working on his trust and confidence.

From what you've described there's nothing acute that needs dealing with in the next few hours / days. I imagine it is playing on your mind and you want to do your best for him but I think the priority is making him feel safe and secure. You've being doing so well on that, I'd focus on building on that success.

I wonder if there are any shampoos or washes that might help in the interim?
 
Sometimes he will allow us to brush his legs, sometimes he snatches. I can try using the comb and scissors approach, he seemed to dislike the snipping noise (what a sensitive soul!)
I did think about using one of those mane combs with a razor incorporated. I haven't got one but if I can get a cheap one it might be worth a try!

If he’d wear them, have you considered some cotton wool and a pair of ears to muffle the sound a bit?

Obvs not if you’re trying to clicker train as that won’t work 😂
 
My advice on the CPL is it can wait a couple of weeks if you haven't felt any skin folds. Clipping the legs to get a good view of the current state would be an advantage to long term management but spend the time to the vet visit just working on his trust and confidence.
Sadly he does have folds - two on each of the front legs at either side of the pastern. The lumps on the hinds seem smaller.

We'll do what we can while we are waiting for the vet...we've started him on marigold and cleavers today and he does have 24/7 turnout so is free to move around. Until we can take a closer look, there's only so much we can do.
 
You could make up a slosh containing benzyl benzoate and neem oil? If he's ok with having his legs sponged, that is. My mare is very water phobic and she tolerates that quite well. I hold the sponge against her leg and as it dribbles, move it downwards to spread it/work it in. I make up my own solution with ingredients all purchasable on t'interweb:

75g emulsifying wax
200 mL 100 % Benzyl benzoate
200 mL neem oil

Heat up the emulsifying wax, either by low/med power microwave in short bursts or in a bowl on the hob. Add to this the BB, followed by some hot (not boiling) water, 200 mL or so. Keep stirring and add in the neem oil, before topping up to about 800 mL. Pour into a bottle and rock to mix, then top up to 1 L. As it cools, it will form a thick lotion - keep rocking, to keep it mixed. I've made this up in a tub, too, for grabbing handfuls to apply as a lotion.

For washes, I add a handful of the lotion to about 1L of warm water to apply directly to skin. It's nothing short of miraculous for my mare's skin condition and is watered down enough that she's not an oil slick. You could, once mixed, use a hair dye applicator to get it to the skin, if he's not ok with the sponge.

Good luck with him. I do remember the thread and I'm so happy that he's landed on his feet. :)
 
All is well with Ozzy! He has been with us for just over a month now and is more settled by the day.

Still waiting for the vet to come out, but I have to say that Ozzy hasn't been doing a lot of foot stamping recently. He is on marigold and cleavers now.

I was hoping to update on the riding very soon - unfortunately I am recovering from a (non-riding related) pulled muscle in the left side of my back so we've not been able to get out as much as we'd like. But Ozzy does really well with his groundwork!
 
All is well with Ozzy! He has been with us for just over a month now and is more settled by the day.

Still waiting for the vet to come out, but I have to say that Ozzy hasn't been doing a lot of foot stamping recently. He is on marigold and cleavers now.

I was hoping to update on the riding very soon - unfortunately I am recovering from a (non-riding related) pulled muscle in the left side of my back so we've not been able to get out as much as we'd like. But Ozzy does really well with his groundwork!
Ah sorry to hear about your back , ouch!

Hopefully he knows he’s now home and can start to enjoy life ❤️
 
All is well with Ozzy! He has been with us for just over a month now and is more settled by the day.

Still waiting for the vet to come out, but I have to say that Ozzy hasn't been doing a lot of foot stamping recently. He is on marigold and cleavers now.

I was hoping to update on the riding very soon - unfortunately I am recovering from a (non-riding related) pulled muscle in the left side of my back so we've not been able to get out as much as we'd like. But Ozzy does really well with his groundwork!

Sounds like he is doing well. Would love to see some more pics of him in the future.
 
Jasmine you can rest easy you have done right by this boy. It may well have turned out differently with the right support, but it wasn't available so you did the next best thing for both of you.
You can move on, hopefully to a new equine friend when you're ready, with better mental health and a whole lot of useful experience x
 
Maybe but at the time I felt out of my depth.
At the time without the right support you were out of your depth and didn't have the experience to be able to cope with a stressed unsettled cob. I suspect a lot of people would have been in the same boat, pretty sure I would have been and I have many more years of experience under my belt.
 
At the time without the right support you were out of your depth and didn't have the experience to be able to cope with a stressed unsettled cob. I suspect a lot of people would have been in the same boat, pretty sure I would have been and I have many more years of experience under my belt.

Absolutely! We acquired a very bargy and bad mannered cob 22 years ago. We still have him and he's taught us a lot.

However, some of Ozzy's initial behaviour was quite frightening to me, especially the kicking out (related to food aggression) and the pulling away/running off. I understood that he was unsettled and had spent a lot of time being transported but I was still worried about getting hurt. OH has endless patience and maintained a calm, consistent approach, especially in the groundwork. I don't mind admitting that he is far, far more patient than me - and he seemed to 'click' really well with Ozzy from the start (which is good considering that he had very little say in the whole thing and had never actually met Ozzy before he turned up at the croft gate!)

The food aggression has improved over the last month but he is still ultra-protective about his haynets - surprisingly, more than he is about bucket feeds. Snoopy and AJ seem to understand and are happy to leave him to it. There will be a reason for this behaviour and it takes time for them to become less anxious about food supply.
We have just got a haybell - now waiting for the round bales to make an appearance in this part of the country!

Overall, though, I couldn't have done this on my own without the expertise of my OH. And his expertise came from years of dealing with a bargy ill-mannered cob (who eventually became a smashing hunter!)
 
Maybe but at the time I felt out of my depth.
I think that you did 100% the right thing in passing him onto a more experienced handler. I reckon there’s a fair chance that you would have got badly injured if he kicked or steamrollered you. IIRC I suggested at the time that you pass him on as you just can’t teach confidence and timing to an understandably nervous handler. It’s either in you to sort it or it isn’t.

An unsettled cob acting bolshy can be very challenging and dangerous indeed if you get sideswiped by him. NK has been upfront in detailing the challenges he presented when he arrived in tanking off, kicking etc.

A younger me might have taken him on, but not now.
 
I don't think Jasmine should be made to feel guilty for feeling out of her depth, especially when struggling with her mental health which probably would have amplified everything feeling too much

Horses are big animals and if things go wrong people get hurt, I was round them since I was 4 until I gave up 3 years ago, and some of Ozzies behaviour would have scared me. My own horse was incredibly polite im not used to dealing with those who's behaviour needs addressing especially when kicking out is involved

Let's also not forget Jasmine's yard didn't seem especially helpful so she didn't even have someone on the ground to support her, nor was she allowed to accept the offers of help from people on here due to YOs policies

Id say Ozzie didn't fully fit the description the dealer put up. Didn't Jasmine say she wasn't the youngest so again, potentially more vulnerable in not being able to move out the way as quickly.
 
I think that you did 100% the right thing in passing him onto a more experienced handler. I reckon there’s a fair chance that you would have got badly injured if he kicked or steamrollered you. IIRC I suggested at the time that you pass him on as you just can’t teach confidence and timing to an understandably nervous handler. It’s either in you to sort it or it isn’t.

An unsettled cob acting bolshy can be very challenging and dangerous indeed if you get sideswiped by him. NK has been upfront in detailing the challenges he presented when he arrived in tanking off, kicking etc.

A younger me might have taken him on, but not now.
Thank you. I will admit he did scare me on several occasions. I didn't take it personally but yes he made me wary of being around him this made it hard to even attempt to bond with him never mind work with him by myself.

I don't think Jasmine should be made to feel guilty for feeling out of her depth, especially when struggling with her mental health which probably would have amplified everything feeling too much

Horses are big animals and if things go wrong people get hurt, I was round them since I was 4 until I gave up 3 years ago, and some of Ozzies behaviour would have scared me. My own horse was incredibly polite im not used to dealing with those who's behaviour needs addressing especially when kicking out is involved

Let's also not forget Jasmine's yard didn't seem especially helpful so she didn't even have someone on the ground to support her, nor was she allowed to accept the offers of help from people on here due to YOs policies

Id say Ozzie didn't fully fit the description the dealer put up. Didn't Jasmine say she wasn't the youngest so again, potentially more vulnerable in not being able to move out the way as quickly.
You are correct I am not young I will be 63 next month lol and I have arthritis so not quick on my feet. I started out learning to ride at 60 maybe a bit old to start out but you don't always get more sensible as you get older 😅. It was a case of if I don't start now I never will. I am just happy that Ozzy has his happy ending. I applaud Nancykitts husband for being so patient with Ozzy and brave getting on him lol.
 
At the beginning of last week Ozzy bit Snoopy low on the shoulder because Snoopy had dared to go too close to Ozzy's suppertime haynet. It didn't break the skin but looked nasty and did swell up.
I don't like it when Ozzy does things like this - as I've said, I know there's a reason, but I just don't like it, especially as Snoopy is such an old man now.
Today Snoopy looked like he'd recovered so we decided to take him out for a short solo stroll and a graze. Snoopy is very happy to hack alone, OH rode him out and I rode him back. Ozzy was left in the field with AJ and I thought they'd be fine.

Well, poor Ozzy was heartbroken that Snoopy had gone out. We can't have been out for more than 35 minutes but when we turned towards the gate Ozzy went absolutely bananas, calling like crazy and doing the most beautiful canter up the field. 'Snoopy, my best mate, where have you been, you've been gone AGES...'

I reminded Ozzy that he'd been nasty to Snoopy last week and he just looked at me. He then let out a big sigh of relief.

Horses are just weird at times..!
 
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