AllieBaba
Posted : 5/11/2009 9:52:47 PM
I'm not sure if I'm actually posting in the thread or sending a pm...I'm trying to post in the thread.
First of all, many wonderful, fine horses start out without being touched for months or years of their lives. I've raised colts that were out on rocky hillsides for 6 months before we ever touched them, and then it was just to separate them from their mothers, get them haltered, handle them a little, then turn them out until it was time to break them.
Second, Arabs are wonderful horses who have an innate desire to work with people. I don't know if it's just that they are such an old breed, but I've never seen a mean Arab, or one that would intentionally or viciously hurt a human.
I wouldn't mess with tying anything to the poor thing at this point. What you need is to get the horse confined, and get it used to having people around. That means, ideally, a round pen, or stall with a turn out. Where you can go in, putter around and the horse can't really get too far away from you. I'm assuming you've managed to get a halter on him, which is a really good thing. I've choked down big colts to halter them because they were truly wild. If you can get a halter on yours without such extreme measures, the horse isn't completely wild. Or it's just an Arab, by nature curious and in love with people. If it doesn't kick, I don't think I'd mess with the plastic bag, you might just teach it to kick.
Start with just touching. When our colts were older, I'd keep them in the round pen, and go in every day or so with a lariat, and stand in the middle and just practice tossing a loop gently at the horse...sometimes it lands on the head, sometimes on the butt, sometimes they step into it. Then it either slides off, they step out of it, or they have to let you remove it. It's the best way I know of to quickly de-sensitize a horse. At first they will run around and act like lunatics, but just watch your body position and stay calm, and eventually they'll get used to it. Keep a sharp knife if some sort of weird catastrophe happens but I've never had one happen. Use the loop to move the horse one way, then the other.
It's just a matter of patience and time.
I have a boy who runs up behind horses yelling and waving sticks. Or sometimes he runs up silently and suddenly. THe one horse I trust with him is my Arab mare, who hasn't been around kids to my knowledge, ever. She always knows where he is. And if you're in the pasture with an Arab who likes you, they won't let other horses near.
They're truly wonderful horses.