JollyTall
Well-Known Member
Hello all, I have only just joined the H&H forum (don't know why it has taken me so long) and there is something I would like people opinions about, or has anyone been in the same situation?
Basically, I wa sworking at a yard earlier in the year, when something happened that In a roundabout way I ended up loosing the job over (no fault of mine)
The owner of the horses was very rarely on the yard to see her horses or her staff. There was a yard manager and three or four of us "girls". One day the manager was about to take a young horse schooling. He is a 4 yr old anglo arab, 16.2 who had only been at the time broken for 3 months and was quite nervy. Once the manager had mounted from the ground and caused a considerable kerfuffle he started to ride up to the school. On the way he went passed the stallion pen. The stallion was turned out and he was not normally when other horses were due to be exercised but we had been told to put him out anyway. This wound the young horse up, which ended up in him spooking (I think at a pink skip bucket, which was by the entrance to the school, again unsusually). The manager fell off, and the young horse fell over and badly frightened himself. The manager and one of the girls then proceeded to take it in turns to re-mount and shout and chase the horse up to the school (he was allready very frightened). The horse had grazes on both his knees and was walking lame but they insisted on trying "so he learns". I agree you have to be firm with young horses and try and get them past being scared of things but what they were doing just seemed wrong to me. In the end myself and another girl managed to take the horse off them, who was by now extremely worked up, and led him away to clean and bandage his grazes. The others continued to shout at him for "being silly" and being extremely rough with his bridle whilst they were holding him. A horse being silly is a horse being silly but a young horse that has just been very frightened really doesn't need to be shouted at. In the end I had a full on row with the yard manager when I tried to take the horse back to his stable to rest and calm down (he wanted to get back on) which resulted in me deciding I didn't really want to work with these people so I left the yard (this was the cullmination of many similar incidents).
I would really like peoples thoughts on this, I still don't know whether I did the right thing or was being "too soft minded about young horses education" (I didn't think so). I would just be really interested to see what others thoughts are.
Thank you
Basically, I wa sworking at a yard earlier in the year, when something happened that In a roundabout way I ended up loosing the job over (no fault of mine)
The owner of the horses was very rarely on the yard to see her horses or her staff. There was a yard manager and three or four of us "girls". One day the manager was about to take a young horse schooling. He is a 4 yr old anglo arab, 16.2 who had only been at the time broken for 3 months and was quite nervy. Once the manager had mounted from the ground and caused a considerable kerfuffle he started to ride up to the school. On the way he went passed the stallion pen. The stallion was turned out and he was not normally when other horses were due to be exercised but we had been told to put him out anyway. This wound the young horse up, which ended up in him spooking (I think at a pink skip bucket, which was by the entrance to the school, again unsusually). The manager fell off, and the young horse fell over and badly frightened himself. The manager and one of the girls then proceeded to take it in turns to re-mount and shout and chase the horse up to the school (he was allready very frightened). The horse had grazes on both his knees and was walking lame but they insisted on trying "so he learns". I agree you have to be firm with young horses and try and get them past being scared of things but what they were doing just seemed wrong to me. In the end myself and another girl managed to take the horse off them, who was by now extremely worked up, and led him away to clean and bandage his grazes. The others continued to shout at him for "being silly" and being extremely rough with his bridle whilst they were holding him. A horse being silly is a horse being silly but a young horse that has just been very frightened really doesn't need to be shouted at. In the end I had a full on row with the yard manager when I tried to take the horse back to his stable to rest and calm down (he wanted to get back on) which resulted in me deciding I didn't really want to work with these people so I left the yard (this was the cullmination of many similar incidents).
I would really like peoples thoughts on this, I still don't know whether I did the right thing or was being "too soft minded about young horses education" (I didn't think so). I would just be really interested to see what others thoughts are.
Thank you