Friday evening my friend had her horse retrimmed and shoed and it took the poor shoer 4 hours to get her feet done. Salty is a AQHA registered 9 year old flea bitten grey mare. She has had this horse for about 3 months and this was the first time she has delt with the shoer since my friend has owned her, she was shoed when she bought her. Back feet she was great, front feet, and she would strike out every single time the shoer tried to trim her hooves and really started misbehaving when he went and started nailing her shoe on. Would do little rare-ups when he held on to her foot to get away. Both front feet she will do this. Never had a problem with cleaning her feet out but now she has developed a habit with striking out forward everytime you try to pick up either of her front feet. Wasn't even allowing you to clean them?!
My friend asked for my help and of course me just being me, I told her to rule out any sorta pain, call her vet or ill have my vet come take a look at her. So today, her vet came out and looked her over, nothing seemed to be wrong that he could see, feel or anything like that. So after ruling out pain or all; I went out and started my afternoon with trying to help and fix this behavior before it got someone hurt.
I took her in the arena and started lounging her both ways then i stopped her, picked up her back feet, she did great, I pet her and then I went to her left front. She struck out right off the bat, and i held on and said "Whoa" she did it again but the second time she rared up so I right away, made her do laps at a canter, for about a minute or so, pulled her back in (she licked her lips a little) and I picked up the foot again, at first she didn't do it so I took a hoof pick, cleaned it out a bit and put it back down. Pet her and told her good girl. Went to the right front, same thing so again we went around and around, picked it up again, cleaned it out and put it back down, pet her ect ect. Went back to the left front, picked it up, pet her leg and around her hoof, talked to her a bitand then i took my hand and sorta lightly tapped on it a little and BOOM, struck out again so once again we did more laps then tried again. Took about 30 mins and she wasnt trying it hardly at all and each time she did we did laps. Using the method "making the wrong thing hard, and the right thing easy" she behaved, she got to stand and get made over, if she wanted to strike out, she got worked. I only held her foot about 10 seconds at a time, and got to the point where I could tap on the shoe part with my hand farly hard and she stood quiet with both feet. So I called it a day.
I want to help my friend out and her horse because the shoer was very tired, hands where literly bloody, sore and he asked her to work with her horse before he had to try again because he said if she pulls this again, he will either bute her, tie her leg up or throw her and I don't want any of the 3 to have to occur. Ill work with her again tomorrow and see if I cant work my way up to a small hammer and just tap around with that. She learned very quick that her striking out would mean she would have to work on the line, and when she stood still, it was a good thing with plently of praise.
Sorry this was so long but I am a detailed women. Anything else I can use to help her get more acustom to her front feet being messed with before the shoer comes again? Any other methods what would help? Am I on the right track here?