[quote=KacyCowgirl]She is extremely hard to saddle. I've sacked her out to no end with the saddle blanket .....but after the first few times, doesn't have much, if any, fear of scary objects (depends on the object).
Hi,
First & foremost, I'd make sure you have a saddle which is light & truly comfortable on her, as discomfort will of course add to the problem.
While most horses tend to be more obvious about their feelings, some, as with people, tend to internalise their stress & 'shut down' in the face of scary experiences. Therefore you may be mistaken that she is not afraid of the sacking out. She may, for eg. lower her head, be 'obedient' & appear to relax, but her eyes are glazed & she may even hold her breath!(as my current boy used to when it was too much for him).
IME it is these type personalities that tend to "suddenly, without warning, out of the blue, for no reason..." explode when things finally get too much & break through their 'shut down' mind. In that case, I'd go right back to the basics & slow down the steps & pressure to ensure she was *truly* confident with everything.
I would personally continue working through this and other 'foundation' issues before attempting to ride or do anything more difficult with her. I would be extremely careful with a horse like this that I *didn't* force her into anything more than she can handle. Of course it doesn't always work like this, but I'd be doing everything within my power to *avoid* causing her to buck or otherwise panic.
Even if you eventually teach her, through allowing her to 'buck it out' that the behaviour doesn't work, she's still going to have that bad, worried attitude about saddling, etc, and you...(she's learned to endure it & that resistance is useless, but hasn't learned to be comfortable & confident with it all) and the more 'practice' she gets at being worried & at bucking, the stronger this attitude/behaviour will become ingrained.
I believe attitude is one of the most important things you can 'train' in a horse & doing everything to promote a strong, trusting relationship and teaching the horse that you & your toys & games are Good Stuff is a vital foundation to everything else.
Ensuring you keep sessions very short and do stuff that is easy & fun for her in between. Eg. spend a couple of minutes with the saddle before going for a walk, doing obstacles, 'follow me' exercises, whatever, then going back for another minute or 3 with the saddle.
No matter what we do she won't easily accept the saddle. She's cinchy and cold-backed .... if someone else holds her, I can get the saddle on her and cinch it up
I would do it in baby steps, lots of 'approach & retreat'. I'd first work on getting her confident *untied*(long lead looped over your arm) with just approaching her with the saddle. If you can't do that, I wouldn't yet be thinking of putting it on her back. I would 'approach' with the saddle, but not get so close that she gets panicky. I'd stay at that point & allow her to move her feet as she felt the need, until she stopped(even if for an instant), at which point I'd instantly 'retreat'. Repeat the process until she's confidently standing there before getting closer. In this way I'd ensure she was truly confident with me standing beside her, saddle raised, before putting it on her *for a second*. Ensure she's confident with that before leaving it on her for longer. Ensure she's confident with it on & you touching her girth..... holding the girth loosely before *gradually* tightening it, etc, etc.
This may all sound very long-winded & tedious, and to begin with, it often is, but tends to be remarkably straightforward & quick with a horse who hasn't learned to be afraid. With her, already having learned this is Bad Stuff, I'd guess it is likely to be rather tedious, until you get to the point where she finally trusts you to be considerate of her.
The day after the clinic, I worked her in the round pen, saddled her, got on and off her several times,
I find one of the hardest things is to quit while things are going well, before you inadvertently go too far. Erring on the safe side and doing less than you think she'll be fine with is generally effective.... if frustrating - I tend to have the thoughts "This is going so well, I think we'll just do one or 2 more...."
I've sat on her two times since then, but can't walk her forward without her bucking.
I'd personally get her to the point where you can do all sorts on the ground with her saddled before attempting to sit on her. I'd get her confident with me just sitting on her before asking her to walk with me. Confident walking before going faster....
Anyway, that's my opinion & approach, so I hope it is of some help. Cheers!