Kelly Marks
Well-Known Member
Tallyho! They care in Towcester! http://www.racingpost.com/news/hors...-ban-use-of-whip-in-finishes-at-track/847219/
Tallyho! They care in Towcester! http://www.racingpost.com/news/hors...-ban-use-of-whip-in-finishes-at-track/847219/
I never hit my horses
Instead, when they ignore my leg when riding I like to take my (hefty) legs off their sides completely, then swing them in for a giant thump.
I am sure they probably have bruises on their rib cage, but at least they don't get marked (as they can from whips).
I also have a Monty Roberts wip w o p - and can give them a good bashing with the knotty part of it.
If they don't respond to that, then I assume they are not suited to be riding horses, and sell them to Potters so another horse can benefit from the good home I offer instead.
I never really hit them though, if you mean with a whip.
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With the stallion and the lady dragged over the door, personally I'd have done whatever it took to get her safe as quickly as possible. That might have involved some action with a broom or whatever was to hand, because in that situation, one more stamp could be the one that killed her. Let's face it though, most of the stuff people are talking about here that they consider justifies a "good smack" etc is nowhere near on that scale.
In some of the ridden situations, like needing a horse to move over because of the Legendary Lorry, most of us don't train our horses to a high level of responsiveness. So the horses can be slow to react, or maybe not as precise as we need them to be. That's when people give them a good whack to get them to respond faster. That's not a criticism, it is just the way most of us tend to ride, particularly when we're out hacking when we don't expect as much of our horses as we do in the arena. A well trained western horse, just for example, wouldn't need a whack to get it to move over quickly, it would be there almost before the rider had thought about what they wanted.
In the case of the stallion and the wheelchair lady then after she'd been rescued I guess the question would have been what happened next about the yard owner who allowed the situation to arise in the first place. You can't work on the assumption that everyone will always do the things they need to for safety around a deranged horse. The responsibility lies with whoever is in charge of the yard to make sure that dangerous situations are avoided. If you don't do that, then it can all go wrong in seconds. (But should the stallion be in the situation where it can cause that much damage in the first place? That's really the question for me. Nothing to do with whether or not a person would be justified in walloping it when things got out of hand).
Can we go back to a post on page 22 or thereabouts. Someone told a story about a stallion dragging someone out of a wheel chair and into its box where it trampled her.
I was first horrified by the tale, but as it expanded, I've come to a different view, notwithstanding I wouldn't like to see anyone hurt or killed.
But this stallion, known to be nasty. A stick kept near his door. The incident with this woman was apparently not an accident as someone had forgotten to close the top door. (was this Cptrayes old man, a serial door opener).
My point is that no wonder this stallion was nasty, kept in a box, top door shut people shouldn't keep any horse let alone a stallion in these conditions.
The responsibility for this horse and his conditions was the yard manager, who was the person who ended up being hurt.
Perhaps if the stallion had been treated more humainly in the first instance she would not have been hurt.
People very often are the architects of their own misfortune.
I never hit my horses
Instead, when they ignore my leg when riding I like to take my (hefty) legs off their sides completely, then swing them in for a giant thump.
I am sure they probably have bruises on their rib cage, but at least they don't get marked (as they can from whips).
I also have a Monty Roberts wip w o p - and can give them a good bashing with the knotty part of it.
If they don't respond to that, then I assume they are not suited to be riding horses, and sell them to Potters so another horse can benefit from the good home I offer instead.
I never really hit them though, if you mean with a whip.
S![]()
What I don't get is everyone arguing about dangerous stallions, kicking shetlands but there's tb's out there getting whipped across the finishing line and no-one bats an eyelid.
In reply- this was a home bred stallion- spoilt. It was just an arsey knob, who used his teeth/feet to get what it wanted 9/10. All the stables on that yard had metal barred top doors. This div of a horse was to have its door shut at all times, if she was on the yard or any clients. (all horses had these shut of a nightime (no idea why- yard policy). Someone had forgotten to shut it. The lady in the wheelchair WAS the YM......
This horse had turnout, and the very best of everything, just NO manners. If it were mine I would have a) had its nuts off if that did nothing to improve it it would have been PTS- nasty peice of work.
That's rubbish though isn't it?)
Lots of people on here do more than bat eyelids about that. We've got people here who write letters, sign petitions and many boycott racing completely. Every time I'm invited to join a Grand National sweepstake I make my views known.
What would "the best of everything" be from the point of view of the horse I wonder? What works for one stallion, or any horse, isn't going to always be right for all.
They bred it, they created the situation it was in, they were responsible for the lady getting injured because they didn't take adequate measures to prevent it.
I agree, given the situation the horse was in at the time of this incident, I too would have it's nuts off, give it a chance and if it didn't work have it put to sleep. There's something seriously wrong mentally or physically or both for a horse to get like that, put the poor creature out of it's misery. Keep passers-by and handlers safe because next time someone could die. Who would breed from an animal like this anyway?
lexiedhb, I have no idea why your stallion behaved like he did.
A lot has to do with attitude and putting the time in with difficult horses rather than just managing them after a fashion.
I note that you refer to this horse as arse and gobshite, did you do this before the accident or has he never been a favourite of yours.
So tell me what you would do if other people use the door and you cannot be absolutely certain to be there? ANYONE can do what you do if they have complete control over the door. I don't.
lexiedhb, I have no idea why your stallion behaved like he did.
A lot has to do with attitude and putting the time in with difficult horses rather than just managing them after a fashion.
I note that you refer to this horse as arse and gobshite, did you do this before the accident or has he never been a favourite of yours.
Amaranta, getting a bit touchy are we, lol. I have read quite a bit of your bulls**te and crap in the past.
I tend not to give a lot of advice, as you say I don't know these horses, nor do you.
Amaranta, getting a bit touchy are we, lol. I have read quite a bit of your bulls**te and crap in the past.
I tend not to give a lot of advice, as you say I don't know these horses, nor do you.
Bye then!
P.s Its only a forum.. I get ignored all the time, its life!
LMAO![]()
LOL Aimietb! Did you write anything sensible?!
I don't mean a slap when he's bitten you, or a "hey! buck your ideas up" tickle with a schooling whip, I mean a real "Oi, behave yourself!" type wallop.
Is it ever warranted?
Enfys, did you ever think this question would spark this response??![]()