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Horse Problem - Rearing Horse In Pasture - Horse rears when approaching humans in pasture

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

QUESTION: Hi. You may be able to give me some advice. We have just got a 5-year-old fjord pony. We know little about her past apart from that she was bought from a sale by the previous owners who kept her as a companion. She had been handled irregularly. She has now settled in with her equine and human companions, she has been lovely to handle and ride and seems to enjoy the attention she gets, always coming when called. The only problem is when turned out, if you enter the field when she is grazing, she canters up to you and rears in front of you. We are unsure if this is a warning or in play, but it makes it difficult to get other horses safely. We are all very fond of her and want her to get over this for her own sake. Any ideas would be much appreciated.
 
REPLY: Thanks for writing. That could be play or it could be otherwise (aggression). Either way, it's unacceptable behavior, so you need to discipline her for that. Here's how: As you see her heading in too fast and/or starting to rear like that, throw your arms up big & wide, flapping your arms (makes you look very big suddenly to the horse), and make this sound very loudly, assertively: "SHHHHHHHHH!!" And kick dirt with your foot in her direction if you need to add that in there, as well. She needs to learn to come in more respecfully, which is: quietly, slowly. Make the right thing easy, wrong thing hard there. If/when she comes in politely, respectfully, turn & pet her, reward. When she comes in aggressively like that (even if it's play, it's aggressive play and she's not allowed to do that with humans!), do what I just said & send her away. You will NOT "lose a friend" in this horse if you maintain your "lead mare" stance there. This is exactly how the lead mare in a real herd disciplines unruly youngsters: she sends them away! Until they learn how to be more polite.

Horses actually like & respect more: the leader/human positioning themselves as lead mare in their herd. What they do not like: those they perceive lower than them in pecking order. "He who moves the other's feet is higher on the pecking order" is a rule all horses live by instinctively. Move her feet there, and away when she's disrespectful like that, and she'll like/respect you more for it.

The other thing you can do if that doesn't work well enough is: use the end of a lead rope (am assuming you have one if/when you're in there fishing out another horse) and as she rears or comes in too fast, twirl that rope overhand vertically, towards her, a long enough extension of the lead rope, smacking the ground hard/loudly as you twirl, if you have to. Horses don't like to run into twirling ropes, and that usually stops them dead in their tracks.

Also...if you need to just move her off, out of your space, away from a gate, etc., as you take out another horse, not her, you can do the same thing: twirl the lead rope end in the direction of her eye (not hitting her of course, just aimed in the general near eye direction). This automatically triggers a horse to turn the head away and where the head goes, the body turns & follows & you moved the horse away from you safely! Then keep twirling the rope or you can kick dirt toward her hind feet until she's moved off & away (keep a safe distance, of course, from those hind quarters/out of kicking range!). Be the lead mare there in their herd! She'll respect you more for it and will settle down there.

More importantly probably, you need a bigger plan in place there now to start instilling manners and training in your mare there.

And here's where I would suggest applying horse whispering/natural horsemanship training techniques in a very clear step by step program, which you can learn more about in my DVD set, the Whispering Way 12-Step Total Training System, and you can order that here: CLICK HERE

After watching the videos, and after learning and applying the methods, you, as the horse's primary teacher will have taught the horse:

  • How to be bonded to you more deeply so that he trusts you to the max and he will be far more willing to do whatever you ask, even when he is in doubt;
  • That you both have a "bonding place" (a "safety zone") to come back to always, from then on, if he's ever upset or afraid, on the ground (or later, in the saddle); we plant a one-rein stop in the foundation of every horse, on the ground first, so that in the saddle, it is automatic. This keeps you safer and the horse more rational, and feeling supported, bonded, connected more deeply emotionally to you.
  • How to relax him when he is tense about something before he is called upon to react negatively.
  • How to have him yield easily, in any direction when asked -- he'll learn how to yield properly to pressure to receive the release of pressure. All horses learn from the release of pressure what it is you want, not from the pressure itself;
  • How to progress bonding to even deeper levels to the point of downright intimacy; makes a horse feel like he never had it so good being with his owner!
  • How to move him from the rear, and him learning to do that rationally, which is so important to teach a horse to do before you ever ride them, and which you'll be using for a lot of other things like trailer loading, going in and out of a gate, into a stall, and so many other places/situations; this also teaches a horse that you are in charge of their feet.
  • How to address effectively any fears (and his reactions to them) that you flush out in his behavior at any given time; my program focuses greatly on finding the fears before they find you and fixing them -- safely on the ground first! Even lay folks can do this. It's all about: safety. This then builds a far more rational, confident, happy horse, because, in essence, you have effectively raised his "fear/anxiety bar." And you will have taught him simultaneously in the process, how to turn to you for nurturance support when/if he is ever afraid or upset.
  • How to do all this first on the ground, then later in the saddle, in that order.
  • How to keep you safe and the horse safe at all times, throughout all of this --- always my biggest training focus.

This video set will help you to lay down an even stronger, more solid and trusting foundation under your horse there that will then serve you well, tremendously, actually, when you do step up into the saddle. By the time you complete the steps, you will have a transformed horse. The final steps are in the saddle and those exercises will more deeply plant into your horse's foundation the one-rein stop/the "safety zone," and more, that will turn him into a far, far more rational, trusting, happier -- and safer -- horse in saddle as well.

And you can do this yourself if you just back up and learn a few things yourself there. This video set will get you there the fastest with your horse, which is why I'm recommending this route. It's designed for anyone on any level, horse or human, to get professional trainer-like results.

And incidentally...my Whispering Way Complete Training Package contains all my videos and training tools that you need to train or retrain your horse yourself the natural horsemanship Whispering Way. You can check out/order the Whispering Way Complete Training Package on my web site here: CLICK HERE

I'm a very strong believer that every horse owner is their horse's primary teacher/trainer whether they realize it or not. Every time you are with your horse, he is learning something. You just want to make sure he's learning what you want him to learn, not what you don't want him to learn! Natural horsemanship training techniques are gentle, effective, and powerful. Works with every horse every time!

But it's real important to back up and break down all teaching steps in a way that you are releasing baby-gives, allowing the horse to feel the release for the right answers incrementally, so that they learn that's really what you want.

This route will absolutely get your horse past all of those issues, and more, I assure you.

One last link on my site that I think might help you there -- to learn a little more about natural horsemanship and prey animal psychology in general -- my "What is Natural Horsemanship" link here:

http://www.naturalhorsetraining.com/WhatIsNH.html

Hope all this helps. Let me know if I can be of any further help to you there and thanks again for writing.

 
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