much-jittering
Well-Known Member
I think he sensed I had absolutely no idea of what he was supposed to be
We had a very wild mare in once who to start with we couldn't touch the head end at all - till the day she died she hated with a passion having her nose touched. One day a young girl I taught walked up to where she was being kept and spent five minutes stroking her nose through the fence. We all were gobsmacked, and assumed that it was as you said - there had been no anticipation or anything at all from the girl, she'd just walked over to see if the horse was strokable (they're all used to have babies etc on the yard that might not be that sociable yet) and found it was. It wasn't to anybody else!
Slightly eerie P.S. to that little tale though, mare did have one foal before she died (not out to start a breeding debate), and recently as a yearling said foal was in the same pen with another yearling. For the time they'd been in for their jabs and foot trim etc the above mare's foal had been the more difficult to do, very reluctant to have much to do with anybody etc. Same girl, now not so young and certainly tall enough for a nervous animal to see her as a threat, went over to say hi to them and the reluctant foal was all over her. Must be in the genes.
Last edited: