face
Posted : 10/6/2010 9:25:16 AM
S$#@& does indeed roll down hill.
When we moved into our barn last fall we moved 4 horses in that knew each other. We had two other horses at 2 other places. Once day we picked the 2 up to take to school for a couple months. It was not fun as they had never met each other. The mare was in 1st and every time we loaded the gelding, who was still new to trailers, she would kick and off he would go. We broke ALL of our trailer ties that day. We had to take the mare off, get the gelding on, then put the mare back on and kept an empty slot between them. The gelding was terrified of her after that. While at school they saw each other only a couple of times in passing.
When it was time to bring them home we knew there would be problems. The two graduates stayed in the barn next to each other for a week. FORCED BONDING. Then they were released into a pasture together with no one else. We did this to make sure they would do OK with each other. They had bonded and would not leave each other's side. The next step was to release them with the others. That went well since they had buddied up and no one got hurt.
Recently we brought the mare's above filly home for a brief visit and tried forced bonding with mare, filly and a gelding that would be the filly's travel companion to her school in GA. Barn time was good. Pasture release was not, the filly was ganged up on by the two that spent barn time with her. Back to the drawing board. Mother went back to big herd and we tried gelding and filly. Now that there were just the 2 of them, it worked fine and they became buddies.
Looking back, in the future if I was bringing in 1 new horse I would take someone out of the main herd and do a week of forced bonding and release just those two in to a pasture, then introduce them to the big herd. I think the new one needs a buddy established before going into the pasture with everyone else. Of course, you have to have the facilities to be able to do this. If I was adding more than 1 new one I would try to do something very similar.
If horses are constantly coming and going though, you will always have this issue. Where we use to board when a new horse came in they would stall board for a week and let the horse into a pasture by itself. This allowed them to observe the horse to determine which herd they would fit in best with. If things didn't work out, then a different herd was chosen. For the most part geldings and mares were separated.