WHEN IS A HORSE A LOST CAUSE?

Shelley you are amazing at giving people confidence with their horses, you are an inspiration when it comes to helping people succeed with their horses.   From our very first meet you were a turning point for me and -10.png

WHEN IS A HORSE A LOST CAUSE?

A saw a question posted on the internet a while back – when is a horse a lost cause?

The answers to this question is not straight forward because it really depends on who is hanging onto its lead rope or attempting to sit on its back! Our human nature tends to see only the horse as the problem but really it is how skilled you are at undoing negative horse behaviour and how you make the horse feel in the process of attempting to do that by the choice of your methods.

I believe that every horse has a star rating of difficulty to work with and this difficulty rating is impacted by the inherent sensitivity of a horse and the negative associations and behaviours the horse has learnt in its dealing with people. All horses sit on a spectrum of how quickly they feel uncomfortable or stressed by pressure or simuli such as novel objects, movement, sounds or smells. The more quickly a horse feels uncomfortable the more rapid they can feel negative about things and the faster the flight response can be triggered. The result of when the flight response is triggers depends whether the horse learns a negative behaviour or not e.g. If it pulls away, it can learn to pull away in similar circumstances; if when it bucked the rider fell off, it can learn to buck when presented with a similar situation. If the horse feels confused, frustrated, worried or uncomfortable when it is worked or trained it will not associate training or handling positively!

Our domestication of the horse also impacts on the difficulty of the horse as the way many horses are traditionally kept in unnatural living arrangements, confinement and restricted access to grazing to name a few result in the horse living with a degree of chronic stress. This chronic stress plus restricted freedom to grow and develop as a horse is naturally set up to do can result in varying degrees of anxiety and neurotic behaviours such as separation anxieties or stereotype behaviours such as cribbing or weaving. We know that when we take humans and restrict their freedom and restrict normal socialisation and diet that an individual’s mental and physical health is impact on, the same goes for horses when they are subjected to our traditional management practices of separation, stabling and twice daily feeding routines.

Therefore, the first thing you do when you are presented with a horse that is being difficult to work with is that you assess for pain e.g. saddle fit, gastric ulcers, and other causes of discomfort. The next thing you do is focus on minimising chronic stress. I have seen a horse’s tension in training plummet with the only change being the horse moved agistment from full board to a herd environment with 24/7 access to quality grazing! Finally, there is the training approach and the methods used to allow the horse to gain clarity and to ultimately feel confident and cool with what you are asking it to do when you work with it. This short article comes with a meme and a quote by Thomas A Edison and this is really the answer to the question when someone asks – when is a horse a lost cause? As long as the horse is sound and absent of pathology you can argue the answer is – maybe never! It means that when you think you have exhausted all possibilities to help this horse there is a chance you haven’t and it just depends whether you are willing to explore them.

When I first discovered a horsemanship method I remember thinking I had found all my answers to working with horses and then I met one that the methods failed to fully relax. That horse showed me that working with a horse was not a method but a process dictated by how the horse felt where I learnt to evaluate not just what the horse did but how it performed the training behaviour as this gave me the insight into how the horse FELT during the process. This horse was a gift, she gave me another dimension to view training, she was the fifth horse that I had worked through this method and if I had not met her there is a chance I would still be thinking that those initial methods I used were all that was needed.

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CRITICISM & OPINIONS OF THE HORSE WORLD