JanetGeorge
Well-Known Member
Ha ha... this sounds JUST like mine. What a special breed they are.
I am currently contemplating why I own mine... We have a new livery in the stable next door, since she moved in 2 days ago hes tried eating their new leather head collar, licked her riding boots while he was tied up and miraculously pulled their new stable rug to his stable (must be barely 2 inch squared gap he got it through by the stable partition) and then stamped and pooed on it. I have never apologized and felt so bad in such a short period of time! I did warn hes a odd ball and to keep things out the way.. but I think shes slightly surprised at how bad he is!
Believe me - it is NOT a problem associated directly to breed. Horses and ponies have memories like elephants! It doesn't actually need something that is BAD for them, like being beaten up, or suffering ain from an ill-fitting saddle. Even after a problem that has created 'bad memories' is fixed completely, they STILL remember the bad side. Obviously the reaction to bad memories can differ by breed - or even by exact bloodlines: just one of many silly reactions I have had was when my 16hh Irish Draught stallion covered a 17hh WHITE mare and wrenched his shoulder in the process (not enough to be lame.) But it hurt. His reaction was to totally ignore any big white mare he approached - when mare was fully in season (and he was normally the randiest little so-and-so I have ever known. It sure wasn't physical - he had no trouble at all covering a 16.3 CHESTNUT mare - he just knew SHE wouldn't burt. He also covered a 16.1 darker grey mare with no trouble. But the original mare that hurt him - and her half sister (also white and 17hh) he would NOT show ANY interest in at all!
The first thing we have to do when ANY horse shows unusual behaviour is to THINK (and keep thinking) about what has triggered bad memories - of being in a new situation (in stable or field, or out hacking/competing) which triggers fear. And - of course - fear is something that different horses have different ways of dealing with - flight or fight. At its worse (again, breed/bloodlines can be influential) will determine how severe that reaction is - from not wanting to be caught - to actualy attacking the thing/person be holds resonsible.