Some People
Member
What on earth is the point in trying to have a reasoned debate when you have quite clearly stated you won't listen to a word anyone with an opposing view has and you clearly just want a fight?
If you don't buy a horse that weaves as it is rewarding the awful neglect and suffering it must have endured, do you not buy any horse with any issue or vice?
If it bites, it been beaten and forced to defend itself?
Bad to catch = must have been attacked with a headcollar?
Difficult to load = must have been abused in a horsebox?
Bucks when ridden = must have badly fitting tack?
Pulls when ridden = must have poor teeth?
Paws the floor = must have been tied up for weeks on end at some point?
I assume you only ever buy absolutely perfect horses as any bad habit or behaviour you accept would surely be rewarding the previous mismanagement of the horse?
Your response is as ridiculous to me as evidently mine was to you!
Firstly we were not talking about a green youngster here, but a well schooled horse which was sold for 10K.
No horse is born bad as someone has already stated, just bad owners/trainer/riders. Vices and issues are born from either objection or ill treatment, either because the horse is not comfortable or afraid.
When a horse rears, it does not do so for fun. It does it in objection, mostly through either pain or fear.
The above applies to most situations regarding objection or refusal. To beat a horse into submission is NOT the answer, as vices/issues can and do develop.
If we do not listen to what the horse is saying, issues can and do arise. It is the way we deal with what the horse is saying before the issue/vice arrives which prevents such issues.
I am not about to instruct, nor talk you through preventing or dealing with each point you make. But what I will say is a good deal of problems horses develop is down to the rider/owner.
Someone can buy a perfectly good horse and it will be ruined and develop issues within a matter of months. If a horse is difficult, some person or thing made him that way.
I believe everyone owning, loaning or taking care of a horse, should have a licence to do so and sit an exam in order to obtain said licience!
And No, I would not buy a horse with any issue. Mine have none, so why would I try to correct a problem some ignorant person created?
If I needed another brilliant horse, I would buy a youngster or breed one and raise it the correct way, so it develops into a well adjusted, capable horse such as the ones I own already.
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