DarkChylde
Posted : 5/21/2009 3:37:16 PM
Okay, here is my contradicting advice.[
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First, I agree with Hunter, they ent your horses, so it ent your job to train him. You WILL spend alot of time that the owners will ruin in seconds, voice of expereince.
To contradict that, it is my tendancy that I develop a certain relationship with every animal I work with. When I used to be a vet tech, and I HAD to work with some dog, me and that dog would develop a relationship pretty quick, and as nature dictates means me standin my ground PERIOD. If I had to work with this animal for awhile, I would prolly establish a relationship with this animal, for my own convience (and safety).
Alpha by horses is achieved over feed and water first. Even wild herds, the mare dictates where they ar eto graze, herself getting the prime grazin first. When we feed our horses grain (unnatural to a natural order to begin with) we aggrivate certain behaviors, such as establishing dominance at feed time. This colt at my house wudda been run outta the barn, then ignored, and if the behavior he exibited comin back was the same, the result wudda been the same. He would not eat if he was doin that. My response would be instantenous, the FIRST sign of ears or butt showin and like any alpha mare he wudda done some steppin till his behavior was acceptable (ie- licking, head lowered, askin to enter). Then, all high and mighty, I wudda let him eat. If he didn't get it, he'd go hungry.
But I don't know if I would do it to a horse that wasn't mine. But if it was YOUR colt, these would be my recommendations, or somethin similiar to establish alpha at feedtime, which I tend to do with horses I have WAYYYYYY before they ever go in the round pen.
Same for the mare. As to the head whackin, I wuddn't do that. I only 'strike' a horse (hit it hard to mean it) when they bite(and that has to be within 3 seconds of the offense or it will not connect with the horse's behavior), kick, strike or charge. Other than that, I only posture. (Cus that is all they are doin, they are not directing attackin you, they are posturing, you posture back.)
That bein said as well, there are exceptions to this. I had a mare that was badly neglected, and I had to take a TOTALLY different approach to her food aggression. It worked, but I didn't do what I described that I do above.