trainer101
Posted : 3/1/2010 5:24:55 AM
week 2
After a week in the pasture with my other two geldings I am happy to say his attitude has improved ten fold. He is calmer and even though he learned quickly before he seems so much more focused on the task at hand. I have taken him for his shots, 4-way, west nile and had coggins pulled and wormed him twice. I loaded him once before to make sure he was ok with it and he stepped right up and even backed out for me. The day I took him to the vets I loaded him about 10 in the morning and after about an hour in the trailer I unloaded him at the barn where I train. Here I worked with him on leading a bit better, lounging both directions and began working with his feet prepareing him for the farrier.
In the trailer he had been pawing something frightful to the extent he had my whole rig rocking and its a 19ft steel slant load with a camper in front. He was fine while I was with him but alone he got impatient. After working him in the arena I took him over and tied him up to one of the many blocker tie rings we have through out the barn. Phil and I both got a soda and sat down. Each time he would pull back I sat my soda down and took him back to where he needed to be. After about 10 minutes I made another loop on the ring which makes it just slightly harder to pull out. They can still pull it out to prevent injury but its just a little more work. We had to laugh at his antics. Picture a puppys first reaction when you place a collar and lead on them and the first time they realize they are caught...how they cry and fall to their backs thinking they are just dying. Pretty close to Frodo. He would paw and then pull back, then rake his side against the barn then glare over at me then proceed to paw again. When he at last stood there with a foot proped up I undid him and took him back to the trailer where his hay bag was waiting.
After his shots, which he didn't even flinch, we headed home. This time he didn't even paw once in the trailer and when we got home he was quite content to stand in there quietly munching his hay. When I lead him out to the pasture he gummed to the other horses through the fence and waited patiently while I untied his halter. I was quite happy when he decided to stay with me instead of move off into the pasture.
Now you might be wondering why on earth I am keeping him to work with...well I'll let you all in on a little secret, through all this I have seen something in this colt. He is smart to the extent that I show him once and he retains the lesson days later and he transfers information better than most from one side to the other. All horses have two sides and what I teach on one side most horses will be a bit better on the other side but its still like starting all over again just because I changed sides. Frodo is one of the few horses I have worked with that transfers the information and lesson.
Second reason is that his missbehaving isn't all his fault. He had been handled a small bit before coming to me but handled in the wrong way so that most of what I saw had become a learned behavior.
In the two weeks he has been here I have handled this colt a total of maybe 5 times and for only about 10 minutes at a time! So for him to lounge both ways without pulling back, change directions without breaking gait, stop and change by disengaging his hindquarters, loading in a trailer on the first try without a panic, backing out without too much concern of where the ground was, coming when I whistle, and being quite the gentleman when leading...I would say he is a fast learner! Well there you have it folks and from here on out I will be posting pictures and writing it like my past training articles. Going over everything I did and how I did it, also a list of the tools I use. I have to admit I am really looking forward to working with him. I have a feeling he is going to be a one of a kind horse and I don't say that lightly.