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HORSES.
. . HOWE & WHY
by Wil &
Beverly Howe
Equestrian
Connection, 1988
Article
#4
More
Ground Manners
Ground
manners are the way a horse responds to you while
handling on the end of a lead rope. This is such a
subject of depth and importance that we decided to
go on a little further about it this month by
discussing the effects of proper and improper
handling of horses during ground work. As spring
approaches, many of us will soon be dealing with
our horses babies. Also we have to ask the
big question of "what do we do with last
years colts, who now weigh 600-800 pounds and
are full of spunk!??"
First of all,
there is a lot of advantage if one starts the
horses ground work early in their life. A
young horse is much easier to persuade and has
learned submissive behavior from the dominance of
its mother. The older a colt grows and the more
independent it becomes, the less it needs its
mother or for that matter discipline, sound
familiar? While a horse is young and small in size,
the less likely they are to hurt themselves or the
handler.
Preparing you
horse for its life in "our world" should be done at
an early age. We encourage handling and halter
breaking a foal as soon as possible and next month
we will present a step by step program about safe
halter breaking and weanling handling. This is a
horses first "start" in life and this first
relationship with humans is so important. It sets a
pattern for the rest of that horses life. Our
goal, as this animals leader, should be to
create an attitude of cooperation, willingness and
respect without fear in his mind.
Many people
will buy or raise a young foal rather than buy an
adult horse with training. They are fun and seem to
be a breeze at first because foals are small, cute,
cuddlely and easy to handle. As summer rolls around
and the people lose interest in the new family
member, up grows this youngster, or "monster"
should we call him. Fall comes and "Oh! Jr. needs a
worming, call the vet and the shoer, he needs his
feet trimmed!" Next thing you know, we have a rodeo
on our hands because Jr. is now too big to "man
handle." It can be a bad ordeal for everyone
concerned. Had Jr. been halter broke last spring,
taught to tie, and lead etc. his encounters with
the necessary could have been a more pleasant
experience.
The object of
teaching your horse to give to limitations and
restrictions at a young age is to never let a horse
know its own strength. This will help prevent the
horse from harming himself, handlers or equipment.
For example, if it can be avoided, one should never
allow their horse to pull back and break the lead
rope or halter and get loose. Once theyve
done it and won theyll try it again. The same
goes for resistant behavior, like a horse jerking
away from you while leading it. Theyll do it
again and learn quickly that they are strong enough
to do so. Horses learn in patterns; more than two
times can become habit. We must be smarter and
quicker witted then our friend, the horse, to
maintain the upper hand of our leadership
submissive behavior, the horse will usually give in
rather then resisting when tests of will are
required.
For the most
part, back yard pet horses receive far too much
fondling and hand feeding. From a trainers
point of view this creates a rather spoiled and
demanding attitude. When a horse shows disrespect
to its handler is when we have lost control of our
leadership role. This kind of equine response is
resistance and no respect. What we as the handlers
want is respect without fear or
resistance.
To maintain
this positive response in our horses, here are a
few more helpful hints in preventing bad manners on
the ground. These ideas apply to horses of any age,
but it is easier to instill this message in the
mind of a young horse with less experience than an
older horse who is more set in its ways.
1. Avoid
petting and rubbing your horse on the head and
around the muzzle. Especially in a stable situation
where a horse hangs his head out of a box stall
door. You often see cranky horses, from too many
unaware passers-by randomly petting a horses head
as they walk by. Keep in mind a horses
limited vision at close range, this will surely
cause a horse to become head shy. Would you like it
if someone rubbed your nose?
2. Keep your
horse a bit hungry for attention. A little bit can
go a long way. It will create that willing
cooperative attitude we are seeking. The reward of
an occasional stroke does wonders. Teach your horse
to know the difference between discipline and
reward than your horse will seek that reward of a
comfort zone if you make it obvious and are
consistent.
3. Give your
horse pleasing attention, the kind he as a horse
can relate to, such as a good pat on the shoulder
or neck rather then the head. A scratch or rub on
the mane or wither area is much like another horse
shows affection. A good grooming occasionally is
recommended but not too often. You dont want
to create a pattern that results in boredom or
irritability about being over-fussed with. A
grooming should be a pleasurable treat, not a
dreaded routine for the horse.
4. Refrain
from regularly feeding your horse carrots, apples
or oats by hand. This will cause your horse to
become pushy, nosey and can lead to nipping or
biting very easily. Rude behavior you cant
afford!
Remember that
the goal of teaching ground manners is prevention
rather than trying to cure a problem after the
fact. There is no reason why a horse cannot behave
like a "gentle giant."
"To
learn how to keep that cooperative attitude in your
horse, order
Video
#1"
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