dorsetladette
Well-Known Member
This is what happened at feedtime this morning:
Horses moved to their 'feeding stations' on the other side of the fence. OH had a schooling whip and approached Ozzy. As soon as this happened, Ozzy took a step back. Because of this, OH gently asked for another step and Ozzy calmly co-operated. Ozzy was then given his feed and ate without fuss. I fed the other two, who can sometimes have a very slight 'handbags at 20 paces' but it was all absolutely fine.
After eating their feeds they congregated at the haybell, but are now all having a rest.
As much as I would love an arena, there is no way on earth we'd ever get permission. The situation with the council and the Crofting Commission is complicated to say the least; I may have to fight for the right to put up a field shelter, but it's impossible to have an arena on a croft, they just won't allow it. If money was no object I might look at getting a de-crofted piece of land and then apply for permission, but there's no guarantee and it would cost at least £50k which I simply don't have. (It also wouldn't be anywhere near our house and croft, which is less than ideal!)
We will have a good think over the next few days/weeks. Part of it depends on Ozzy's behaviour from now on, but he is certainly calm this morning. We have an EP visit on Saturday so we'll see how he is then.
I have to admit that I am scared of him and he probably knows this - so I'm keeping away for now.
For what it's worth I think short term that your routine from this morning is probably the best way forward until you are feeling happier around Ozzy. It doesn't give him the opportunity to push his lucky with you again while your not feeling on top form. And OH seems to handle him firmly enough for Ozzy to know/understand that he is top dog.
I don't have an arena or proper lighting and I am limited to what I can do this time of year as I'm sat in an office in daylight hours. My boys generally get the winter off every year apart from basic handling during the winter months. This routine works for me generally speaking. Mine are out 24/7 with hay, water and shelter and rugged when needed. I know I'm at the opposite end of the country to you and we get much milder winters than you, but I do feel if they are out in miserable weather just 'being' is enough work for most horses. I seems to be the milder calmer weather that gets the devil in my lot and causes any issues.
It there anyway you can put up a penned off area that Ozzy goes into for his feed? It doesn't need to be huge but big enough for his feed to go in and then he is allowed into it. I think someone commented above suggesting that Ozzy is taken to the food rather than the food taken to Ozzy. This may give him some security from thinking that anyone will steal his dinner, which may change the attitude and subsequent behavior. I did something similar by a gate to feed a resource guarder so everyone else could eat in peace. Set up a coral type area round the inside of the gate so I could walk in with the feed pop it down and them open a gate to allow him in. This horse wasn't aggressive to people only other horses so the situation is a little different - but food for thought no the less.
Personally (and without knowing you or the horse personally), apart from maybe a designated feeding area for Ozzy if it were possible I think if you can limp along doing what you have done this morning until the better weather arrives and then hit the ground running with his groundwork and work load over the spirng, summer and autumn you could get some really good boundaries and manners in place which should 'just' need maintaining to manage winter easier when it arrives next time.
In the meantime don't be to hard on yourself and keep yourself safe.