Zabby
Well-Known Member
Whacking bum ewas for a rearer rearing at you. A rearer rearing 50 yards away isn't really a problem..
If you have a horse attempting to take off, and you go at the butt the right way, the horse will turn around and get the butt away from you and the face towards you.
I'm NOT saying that these methods will work on every horse at every situation. That's the fun with horses; you have to figure out what works with that siruation and that horse. These are good ways to start if you have that kind of problem, thn the horse may respond unexpectedly and this is where you use your brain to outsmart it.
Keeping the face will rarely do any good in the long run. It's getting the butt and feet to work with the horses head in the acute situation, and training everyday behaviour in all parts of the horse handeling (even parts that's not a big problem) that makes the horse safe and easy.
How many of you with horses that will run away or pull in the halter has spent a few minutesevery day to teach the horse to soften and yield off the preassure? As in standing beside it, taking the slack out from the rope and waiting for the horse to turn it's head and give the slack back. To the right, left and down. That is an excellent way to keep the horse from pulling through. It may not be all of the answer, but a little part. Lots of small parts get big.
If you have a horse attempting to take off, and you go at the butt the right way, the horse will turn around and get the butt away from you and the face towards you.
I'm NOT saying that these methods will work on every horse at every situation. That's the fun with horses; you have to figure out what works with that siruation and that horse. These are good ways to start if you have that kind of problem, thn the horse may respond unexpectedly and this is where you use your brain to outsmart it.
Keeping the face will rarely do any good in the long run. It's getting the butt and feet to work with the horses head in the acute situation, and training everyday behaviour in all parts of the horse handeling (even parts that's not a big problem) that makes the horse safe and easy.
How many of you with horses that will run away or pull in the halter has spent a few minutesevery day to teach the horse to soften and yield off the preassure? As in standing beside it, taking the slack out from the rope and waiting for the horse to turn it's head and give the slack back. To the right, left and down. That is an excellent way to keep the horse from pulling through. It may not be all of the answer, but a little part. Lots of small parts get big.
Fun, aren't they? I don't think anyone can really understand the "drugged" effect until they see it.
I wonder how Zabby, who suggests whacking his bum, thinks I should reach it? I am either not within 50 yards of it, him having decided, on this one occasion in 3 months, that he will simply rip the rope out of my hands and run off back to his chums, or I am tagging along for the ride swinging from his headcollar in a hopeless attempt to turn him. If I could reach it, does she really think that he would hang around to let me whack him on it? Not a chance!
I think what some people also don't seem to understand until they see it is that the chifney is like a magic potion. You put it on, and simply because it is there you never have to touch the thing. Like a magic wand has been waved and turned your crack-head into a born-again Christian.
Zabby you aren't the only one with a history of retraining other people's disasters. I've done that too, without even thinking about a chifney. But this horse is different, and until you meet one like him you will never understand. To be fair, before I owned him I would probably not have believed it either.
I wonder also how many of these people advocating "kinder" methods have the kind of horses who are forever at your jacket, or your hands, looking for their next "treat". I see people standing laughing at their "lovely boy" as it rifles through their pockets, thinking that it's cute. That's not my idea of good training.