Isobel05
New User
Well, you know the type, likes to make a soap opera out of a blade of grass moving in the wrong direction.This filly is rising 2 and proving a little more tricky than most so i'd appreciate anyone's opinion who is experienced with youngsters regarding useful exercises for the the very illogical brain and short attention span that goes with those of this age that have a 'very' pronounced character. (Please note here that i've worked with horses and youngsters all my life, and the reason i'm asking is that this girl is the most extreme character i've come across. I'm solely wanting to proceed with what is best for her with hopefully the help of anyone who has experienced a similar character and worked through it successfully)
She is becoming a little too unpredictable and combative than i'm happy with. At present I am not letting anybody else handle her because i'm the only one she doesn't scare. Her answer for everything is to face hind to and kick. Dangerous in the stable undoubtedly. She has very little respect for your personal space and will rear and run 'through' you being led just because she feels she can. She's quite a complex character but I shan't ramble on now about my suspicions as to why. She does 'seem' to have a normal amount of trust and she is always shortly and sharply reprimanded by voice or a yank on the lead rope as she starts to misbehave. She's not scared in human presence, only wary and combative if she knows that 'she's' kicking off and wants to have her way. My stand point with her to this point has been simply to deal with her calmly and firmly, and for the most part let her mature without drama but make sure she never has the last word. Likewise, to this point the flare ups have been short lived and stabilised to being a pleasant and normal youngster in the main. But now she's rising two and her ability to logicise the most comfortable and safe place to be should be on the rise I need her to yield to pressure rather than barge back to the point of a) her falling over, b) knocking me over. Moreover to respect space because the unpleasant side is now starting to dominate. She pulls ugly faces at other horses and humans far more than any other youngster i've known. As most of you know, it can be a very fine balance at this age, because too soft and respect will never be found, too harsh and you've got the potential for vices and more combat in later life.
So my question is, with a youngster of this age, what is the best SHORT exercise you would do every day to teach her to yield to pressure with the *least chance of confusion* or retaliation. I've tried the usual NH exercises I use on youngsters successfully but her will to resist at any cost is bogglingly strong. Like it or not though, she must learn to accept her place rather than regularly challenge it. It is a little Jekyll & Hyde, sweet as pie and affectionate one minute and then a monster the next. It baffles me because she is handled consistently, calmly, yet firmly when needs be.
Come the spring and solid ground she will be doing join up regularly, right now it is impossible thanks to a move and being stuck with big open fields leading to a whole lot of unwanted mud skiing! She is in a pressure halter for the time being, but even so, being led i'm having to tuck her nose into her chest with one hand to control her. Not nice or ideal, and I don't want to resort to a chifney. Ideas, suggestions, anything to get this filly on the straight and narrow that I may have omitted will all be taken on board.
Thank you for any/all suggestions
She is becoming a little too unpredictable and combative than i'm happy with. At present I am not letting anybody else handle her because i'm the only one she doesn't scare. Her answer for everything is to face hind to and kick. Dangerous in the stable undoubtedly. She has very little respect for your personal space and will rear and run 'through' you being led just because she feels she can. She's quite a complex character but I shan't ramble on now about my suspicions as to why. She does 'seem' to have a normal amount of trust and she is always shortly and sharply reprimanded by voice or a yank on the lead rope as she starts to misbehave. She's not scared in human presence, only wary and combative if she knows that 'she's' kicking off and wants to have her way. My stand point with her to this point has been simply to deal with her calmly and firmly, and for the most part let her mature without drama but make sure she never has the last word. Likewise, to this point the flare ups have been short lived and stabilised to being a pleasant and normal youngster in the main. But now she's rising two and her ability to logicise the most comfortable and safe place to be should be on the rise I need her to yield to pressure rather than barge back to the point of a) her falling over, b) knocking me over. Moreover to respect space because the unpleasant side is now starting to dominate. She pulls ugly faces at other horses and humans far more than any other youngster i've known. As most of you know, it can be a very fine balance at this age, because too soft and respect will never be found, too harsh and you've got the potential for vices and more combat in later life.
So my question is, with a youngster of this age, what is the best SHORT exercise you would do every day to teach her to yield to pressure with the *least chance of confusion* or retaliation. I've tried the usual NH exercises I use on youngsters successfully but her will to resist at any cost is bogglingly strong. Like it or not though, she must learn to accept her place rather than regularly challenge it. It is a little Jekyll & Hyde, sweet as pie and affectionate one minute and then a monster the next. It baffles me because she is handled consistently, calmly, yet firmly when needs be.
Come the spring and solid ground she will be doing join up regularly, right now it is impossible thanks to a move and being stuck with big open fields leading to a whole lot of unwanted mud skiing! She is in a pressure halter for the time being, but even so, being led i'm having to tuck her nose into her chest with one hand to control her. Not nice or ideal, and I don't want to resort to a chifney. Ideas, suggestions, anything to get this filly on the straight and narrow that I may have omitted will all be taken on board.
Thank you for any/all suggestions