The idea
The idea for this post came after a comment on one of my
other hubs, titles Natural Horsemanship Fact or Fiction.http://paintedlady2000.hubpages.com/hub/Natural-Horsemanship-Fact-or-FictionThe person said that of all of the animals that we have
domesticated, this is the one that baffles them because it is so wary and
jumpy. (I hope I quoted that correctly) So, JKenny, this one is for you.
The Wary or Jumpy Horse.
There
are many adjectives that can be placed in front of the word horse, especially
to describe a horse that does not stand quietly for anything to take place,
including the simplest of tasks. Let's name a few; wary, jumpy, nervous,
untrained, head strong, hot blooded, the list could go on and on. For the sake
of getting to my point, I will digress and move on. For the sake of this
conversation, I'm going to use the adjective nervous.
We've
all seen the horses, either at shows or at trail rides, some even at their own
homes who are always looking for the proverbial monster that they are sure is
going to jump out and eat them at any moment. I know that I've seen and dealt
with my fair share of them. And through those experiences have come to the
conclusion that this condition shall we call it, is usually the result of 1 of
3 things.
Want to
know what those three things are? Read on.
Three Conditions that cause a Nervous Horse.
I'll
start this list with the easiest to explain of the three:
Breeding: The temperment of breeding stock is very
important. Bad tempered or unfavorable tempered horses should never be used as
breeding stock. Now granted, some breeds are known for being hotter than
others, like Thoroughbred and Arabians as a couple of examples. Does that mean
that every horse of those breeds are nervous horses? Of course it doesn't, they
are just more know for the nervous ones than the calm one.
Mishandling in the Horses
Past: I am not strictly talking about a horse being physically
abused, but that can result in a very nervous horse. I'm talking about a horse
that has been around people, and had never been taught to follow them.
Lack of Knowledge: Here
I'm talking about a horse that has never been handles period. Granted, you're
not likely to see one of these at a horse show or on a trail ride, but we all
know that they exist.
The
biggest problem we face in trying to train them is figuring out which one of
these fields they fit in.
Which Field is My Horse in?
Luckily,
with experience and a watchful eye you can figure out which why your horse is
nervous. A lot of nervous horses can learn to relax and trust their leader.
Nervous horses can actually be good horses in the end, though it will take
work. Sometimes, it's as obvious as the nose on their face.
So, I'll
so through the fields one by one and give you some of what to look for.
Breeding: If you
are buying the horse from the breeder, ask to see the horse's parents. If both
of them act like complete nervous idiots, chances are it's breeding. If you get
the horse later on from someone else, simply ask what the horse's temperment
is. If the horse is registered, a little digging around can often uncover if
breeding is the issue. Never write off a horse's nervousness as breeding
strictly because of it's breed.
Mishandling in the Horse's
Past: If it was a case of physical abuse the horse will bear
physical scars from it. That is one dead give away, the horse will also not
want anything to do with you, it just wants to be away from you. If it's just a
case of not being taught any better the horse will usually be pushy, and if it
spooks will often jump right on top of you, because it is less scared of you
then whatever has spooked it. Teaching it to respect your space should be a
major concern with the later case.
Lack of Knowledge: Usually
if you get one of these, you knew it when you bought it. If not, you found out
when you picked it up or it was delivered. It's the one that requires a loading
shoot to get into the trailer, or is the one that is unloaded directly into
whatever enclosure you want it kept in, which for your sake I hope was a small
paddock or round pen. But, it's OK, these are usually the nervous horses that
come around the quickest.
What equipment will I need?
This is
a pretty simple question to answer. You'll need the following things; a good,
quality halter, a lead rope(at least 12 foot long), a round pen or small pen(if
you don't have one of these, you can do this with the halter and lead and
that's fine), a whip, and various items to desensitize the horse with. I
personally suggest plastic bags, as I have seen even the calmest horses come
unglued at the sight and sound of a plastic bag blowing in the breeze.
Pretty
simple list, huh?
OK, now what?
Ground
work. Nervous horses are trained like any other horse, from the ground up. No,
you can not run the nervousness out of a horse. You can however redirect his
attention to you, which is where you want it to be.
Note: If you are
not confident in you body language with horses, you may need to carry a whip to
use as on extension of your arm.
At
first, all that may be required to send him off around the round pen or small
paddock; which ever you have access to, is simply your presence. His instincts
tell him run first, think later.
Note: If your horse is trying or thinking
about jumping out of what ever you are using back off, because if they feel too
much pressure, they will try it. I'm not saying leave the enclose, simply back
out of the center to one side, where he has more room to get away from you.
What ever slice of the pen you are in is your territory, keep him out of it,
but honestly if he was thinking about jumping out, you simply being there
should change his direction.
Let him
make a trip or a trip and an half around the pen, then move to cut him off and
change his direction. It does not matter if he turns into the pen or into the
fence as long as he leaves going in the opposite direction. I don't even care
how fast he leaves in the opposite direction as long as he leaves. The horse
that you are watching is probably running around the pen with his head up in
the air, his ears twitching every direction, you can probably see the whites of
his eyes very clearly, his lips are pulled back tight. Some horses will even
grind their teeth when stressed or afraid. As you continue to work him back and
forth around the pen, you should start to see a change in his body language.
His head will lower to a natural carriage, his inside ear should be directed at
you, his eyes will relax, and his lips will relax.
This
point is where you simply turn your back on the horse, and give it the
opportunity to come to you, or at the very least catch it's breathe for a
moment while facing you. If he takes a step in your direction, let him rest
some more. If the horse stops and faces away from you, send it straight back to
work. This may take five minutes for some horses, and an hour for others. Every
horse is different.
Desensitizing.
I know
that some popular clinicians say that there are four horses that you train in
this stage, left side, right side, in front of (not directly, for you safety),
and behind (Again, not directly, for your safety.). Personally I have found
that there are six, the original four, plus below and above. Always keep your
body language very relaxed when doing desensitizing exercises, and start with
gentle movement then work your way gradually up to more abrupt movements.
By the
time you get to this point of training, you should know which of the fields you
horse truly belongs in. If he belongs in the lack of knowledge field,
Desensitizing and Sensitizing should be carried out like you should with any
normal horse. If he belongs to either of the other two fields, you need to
spend more time on the desensitizing than you normally would. Always start with
your equipment, halter, lead rope, whip, etc. Remember to start away from the
horse and gradually work in closer to the horse, approach and retreat. If he
wants to leave, that's OK, let him. Send him straight back to work. (The object
is to back off before he gets to the point of leaving.) It should not take as
long for him to ask to come back in and stand in the middle with you. When he
asks, push his just a little longer, then tell him it's OK to come in.
If you
know that you can get an object as close as 10 feet way from him before he
tenses up and leaves, stop at 10 and an half feet. Don't try to force these
exercises on him, let him kind of come to them. If you try to force the issue
you can make him more nervous.
Desensitize
him to your equipment very well before you even thing about doing any
sensitizing exercises.
Sensitizing
Nervous
horses will usually require very little sensitizing, and too much time or
energy expended in this stage, can actually make him more nervous. (I'm
sticking with the male gender, let's assume it's a gelding, because I started
it in the last area, and wish to avoid confusion. Of me, not necessarily you!)
When working on this section, I agree that you are training four different
direction, forward, backwards, left and right. Granted a horse can move forward
and to the left at the same time, but he has to learn each maneuver
individually first.
This is
the area where your body language and posture will actually help drive him away
from you. If you focus your energy behind his drive line (imagine a line
running vertical to the ground right behind the horses withers.) it should
drive the horse forward. There are a few decisions that you need to make before
you start this work. The first is, what ques you want to use. Do you want to
point in whatever direction you want him to go and have him go that way, or do
you want to use words like left or right, or what ever as long as you are
consistent. Understand that you will start with the que only, if that does not
work you will left the whip as you repeat the que. For most nervous horses this
is enough, but if it is not, you may have to touch him with the whip while you
repeat the que yet again. He needs to associate the que with moving in what
ever direction you are wanting.
If the
horse starts to get nervous, go back to something that you know he can do, even
if it is a desensitizing exercise that he excelled at.
What about the Nervous horse that isn't Nervous until you put a
halter on it?
I know
this sounds strange, but they do exist. I have seen horses that seem fine being
around stuff and people, up until you put a halter and lead rope on them. You
effectively take away their just leave if you get spooked option, and they feel
trapped, so now they are a completely different horse.
This is
no big deal, you just do the ground work, desensitizing and sensitizing with a
halter and lead, instead of free lounging in a round pen. Make sure to wear
gloves and if the horse spooks, do not try to stop the spook just go with it.
Now,
this is where if I was a big time clinician, I would try to sell you my handy
dandy halter and lead rope set for $49.99, or what ever price I thought someone
would pay for it. But I'm not, so I'll just say use what ever halter and lead
rope you have around, just make sure that it is in good condition. I will
suggest using a lead that is at least 12 feet long. That way you can allow rope
to slide through your hand, if you can't keep up with the horse spooking. This
is why you need to wear gloves, because even if you relax your hand (which you
won't, it's human nature to try to stop it, and your hand will tense some) the
rope being pulled through it will burn you hands.
Knowing when to Quit
I'm not
talking about quitting on the horse, but quitting for the day. It can be
difficult to stop, especially if the horse is doing really well, but eventually
the horse is going to get bored or his attention span is going to go out. You
need to quit before either of these happen. If the horse is starting to get
bored or his attention seems to be wondering, go back to something that you
know he can do really well. Have him do that, then stop for the day on a good
note.
If at
any time you feel your frustration growing, again go back to something that you
know that he does really well, and end the day on a good note.
Losing
your temper with any horse can undo all the work that you have just done. If
you feel that you have to, and the horse is in a safe place just drop the rope
and walk off for a while. Return, and end on a good note after you have had a
few minutes to compose your self. It is far better to just walk off, then risk
totally losing it on the horse. It's also better for you, it will eventually
teach you more control of yourself.
So, what's next?
After
the ground work, desensitizing, and sensitizing you will go on with the same
ground work that you would do with any other horse. Always backing up to
something the horse can go well when he gets nervous. Redirect his attention
from what ever, and give him something to do that he can do.
Take his
training slow and steady, and his trust in you will grow. Every horse in
training needs to be worked daily, even if you can only squeeze in a few
minutes. Always start with something that you know he can do and build off of
that.
When nervous horses spook
As you
work with your horse, you will begin to know when a spook is coming. You will
need to learn to relax in these situations arise. Now I'll tell you why. Say
you're out on the trail, and you feel your horse tense up, getting ready for a
spook, in response to him tensing up, you tense up, collect your reins, even
though you may not realize it, your seat tightens, your legs tighten, and you
hold your breathe, all getting ready for the ride that you are fixing to have.
Whether it's a jump to the side, a spin and run off in the opposite direction
or a bolt, buck or rear, your body is getting ready for it, because you mind is
saying, here we go again. Your horse interprets this as what he is thinking
about spooking as is a real threat, because his leader is also getting ready to
spook at it. Do you see how this is a chain reaction, getting ready to explode?
All the
work that you have done with him, has been to teach him to trust you. If you
stay relaxed, he should walk right by what ever it was that he was thinking
about spooking at. The key to staying relaxed? Keep breathing, even if you have
to tell yourself breathe in, breathe out, just keep breathing. Holding our
breathe is usually our body's first physical response to a stressful situation,
and it is often the reason why we can not recall all of the details of the
situation, but that's another blog all by itself.
The
horse looks to you for leadership, and if you remain relaxed and not spooked,
so will he.
Will my horse ever be where he doesn't spook at everything?
Yes, he
will get to where he will not spook at everything. But the chances of him ever
getting where he will not spook at anything are not very good. There is no way
that you can expose him to everything that could ever possibly spook him during
training. The good news is that he will get to where he spooks more quietly,
and less explosively than he does now. He will learn to rely on you for input,
and trust your judgement. But only time and training can build this
relationship.
Gimmics
Most of
the big time clinicians, sell their information at a premium price, and they
tell you that you have to use their equipment for it to work. When in fact, you
can use a good condition halter and lead rope you already have and what ever
whip you already have as well. If not, you can buy a few of them for what these
clinicians charge.
Now, can
I sell you a halter and lead rope set? You bet I can, for the price of $24.00
for the set, plus shipping and handling. But I can guarantee you that I'm not
making a killing on them either. For each set, I would make a grand total of
$6.60, all the rest is the cost of materials. It doesn't even figure in that it
takes me five to six hours to braid the lead rope. I make them because I use
them, not because I tell everyone else that they have to use, or this training
won't work.
You'll
never convince me that CA's halter is any better than mine, and mine only costs
me a dollar and a few minutes of my time to make.