R2R
Well-Known Member
I am posting this with the aim of making a point, having just trawled through 51 pages of the Parelli thread and agreed with most of it, I think it is despicable.
Sometimes, in this horsey life, things happen which arent very nice. I can think of three things as an example and am sure I could think of a few more- which I am going to use now as a demonstration.
1. About 10 years ago I was at a yard and a foal was orphaned. We had a surrogate mare come in, obviously terrified. The mare was hobbled to allow the foal to drink for the first two days. This saved the life of the foal, however was not particularly nice to look at as the mare was very distressed. In two days the foal and mare were bonded and 10 years later my friend still owns the mare who is no worse for her ordeal.
2. My youngster is VERY stubborn to the point he enjoys being spanked (LOL!!!) however the first time I asked him to go into water we had a 35 minute stand off. I know him very well, he was in no way scared, just taking the mickey. Every time he reared he got a smack which meant he had welt marks from the whip. He is not damaged in any way, went in the water, jumped more jumps and went in again (with no smacking) afterwards.
3. I have seen (not me) a horse with its leg tied for clipping same theory it was not scared of the clippers but used to boot out at the person clipping and the year before had shattered my friends thigh bone doing just that. So had its leg tied and stood on 3 legs whilst back end was done no twitch, no flinching, but safe. Horrid to watch but safe.
I am not in any way defending what happened at the Parelli demo as I think it is hideous BUT my point is sometimes common sense must prevail (surely) and sometimes using force is necessary to speed things up in an emergency/prevent a bigger battle later on/keep the person on the ground safe?
Surely?
Sometimes, in this horsey life, things happen which arent very nice. I can think of three things as an example and am sure I could think of a few more- which I am going to use now as a demonstration.
1. About 10 years ago I was at a yard and a foal was orphaned. We had a surrogate mare come in, obviously terrified. The mare was hobbled to allow the foal to drink for the first two days. This saved the life of the foal, however was not particularly nice to look at as the mare was very distressed. In two days the foal and mare were bonded and 10 years later my friend still owns the mare who is no worse for her ordeal.
2. My youngster is VERY stubborn to the point he enjoys being spanked (LOL!!!) however the first time I asked him to go into water we had a 35 minute stand off. I know him very well, he was in no way scared, just taking the mickey. Every time he reared he got a smack which meant he had welt marks from the whip. He is not damaged in any way, went in the water, jumped more jumps and went in again (with no smacking) afterwards.
3. I have seen (not me) a horse with its leg tied for clipping same theory it was not scared of the clippers but used to boot out at the person clipping and the year before had shattered my friends thigh bone doing just that. So had its leg tied and stood on 3 legs whilst back end was done no twitch, no flinching, but safe. Horrid to watch but safe.
I am not in any way defending what happened at the Parelli demo as I think it is hideous BUT my point is sometimes common sense must prevail (surely) and sometimes using force is necessary to speed things up in an emergency/prevent a bigger battle later on/keep the person on the ground safe?
Surely?