Veteran horse help please

tankgirl1

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Hi

My friend and I have recently bought (after a 4 week loan period), a lovely 16yo ID cross. It's the first horse either of us have owned - We both have a LOT of experience from when we were teenagers, but this was 10+ years ago, and we have only got back into horses over the last 12 months or so.

He's a lovely boy, but is quite withdrawn. his old owners were complete novices, had him 6 years and didn't do much with him - he was an expensive pet in their words. They bought him off a company who had 'professionally bombproofed' him - whatever that means??

During the last 6 years he has spent quite a bit of time living alone, which I firmly believe is not good for any equine! His old owners then bought another horse, and the 2 of them have lived together for the last few years.

It's a small yard - just the 2 horses - and Mac has always been the one that got left in the field while the other one got groomed and taken out. T'other one has always been the boss!

Since we have had Mac we have been bringing him in twice a day - for 5 mins am to pick out feet and change/take off rugs, and for a couple of hours pm to dry out/groom, pick out feet and feed. He never got hard feed routinely before - we are giving him chaff with a balancer incl pro biotic, plus glucosamine as he is a bit stiff and clicky. Forage ad lib whilst in. We leave barn doors open so that his field mate can see him whilst he's in, as he understandably tends to hang about at the gate.

We ride him 4-5 times a week - gentle hacks only atm.

I think and hope that we are doing everything right by Mac, and he does seem to enjoy and relish the attention. Things are changing in the 'herd' though, with us having Mac, and him becoming the one getting regular attention etc.

He was very withdrawn when we first met him, and he is slowly coming out of himself, but I wondered what more we could do to bring his personality out? It's like he's always been bottom of the heap both with herd and people, and he's being very reserved - yet I know there's a giant thelwell pony in there! :D

Are we doing right? What can we do better for him?
 
sounds like you are doing much more than he's ever had, and a lot more than a lot of horse I know get, so I would just carry on doing all the good that you're currently doing!

Hes lucky to have found some new caring owners :)
 
It sounds as if you are doing exactly the right things for Mac. I usually find that it can take horses many months to settle into a new home but it does sound as though he is actually living in the same place as before. He will gradually open up to you, if you keep your handling consistent. He will have to learn to trust, not just you, but also the fact that you're not going to disappear and leave him back where he started.
Lucky horse, to have found you.
 
Thank you - yes he is living on the same yard, same stable - we inherited a fab deep litter bed haha!

I think he's finding it hard as the other horse is sniping and biting at him when we turn him out. Also preventing him from coming to the gate when we call him, by getting in front of Mac, shoving his back end in front of him, and then grazing!

Poor Mac then just stands and stares at us!
 
Just be careful with that, he needs a quiet life and peace free grazing so if he's being bullied he may be much happier in a paddock of his own or with a more suitable companion. If he is on his own then you can easily have him within sight of other horses/horse.

Been there with an oldie and she ended up being very unhappy and lost weight :-( once we moved her she was 100% happier xx
 
Thanks Supertrooper - can't really move yards at the moment due to location, time etc, as we are quite rural. There is potentially room for a 3rd horse as there are 3 stables, but the 3rd is currently being rented as storage.

I'm hoping Mac and his field mate will sort it out between themselves.... we are also very tentatively thinking of asking the owners of his field mate if we could ride him... as he rarely gets ridden, as he is by all accounts (not seen him out myself) a spooky fizzy type - he's an ex eventer - and owner has lost her confidence a bit....
 
You could try a little clicker training. It is great for stimulating the brain in older horses who typically get a lot out of it, and the problem solving then getting it right is really helpful for horses who are a bit shut down.

It also means the horse learns very good associations with the people doing the training - there is nothing like seeing a horse's face light up at the thought of a few clicker games (it very quickly becomes about more than the food :)).

Shawna Karrasch's site is a good starting point http://on-target-training.com/

Hannah Dawson has some great tips
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DMmYb3P4mq0&feature=youtube_gdata_player
 
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