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Posted on 09/18/2004 6:56:23 AM PDT by HairOfTheDog
It gets up to the nineties here. Sometimes over a 100 at mid day but not often. Mornings are cool, evenings are nippy. We are at a higher altitude than Phoenix, over 4000' so that makes a difference.
It's just a grassy looking grass. Many lawns are a rye/fescue blend.
Would yall tell me again how to lay a horse down? The posts buried. You take hold of the opposite side of the bit and pull their head towards you, right?
Rye? That's what we plant in our yards in the winter around here.
Okay, check http://www.powells.com which is a used book store in Seattle. Their prices are good, delivery great, and they will keep a notify list for you.
What? Cindy why are you asking?
Why? You know. If Sarah Lee ever bucks me off again she's going down too. I just need to refresh though so I make sure I get it done in 10 seconds:'). I'm respectful of her size but I'm not afraid of her any more, Hair. I'll do what the trainers recommend, (kind of) but I'm tired of this crap. If she's going to stay she's going to behave. Even if it doesn't stop the bucking she's going to see what it's like to eat dirt too.
I don't know Cindy.... It seems like a pretty varsity move.... to be demonstrated and done by someone experienced. I wouldn't do it alone, even on the pony.
Yeah I know and a last resort that I will hopefully never have to use but I will if I have to. If I prevent it or stay on it's not an issue. Eddie can watch but if he helps it will be just like with Okie. He'll be the alpha.
If you have a horse you need to lay down, you don't need the horse, remember the horse that Becky did that too was an act of last resort to try to salavage the horse, it didn't work and she sold the horse and got another one that didn't have those kind of problems.
BigMack
Well, I'm not real sure I'd try that. You can pull a horse that is rearing over relatively easy (every thing is relative with a 1200 animal) but other than that, she's not going cooperate while you do this, cause it's going to scare her immensly.
I am not sure I could even get my very compliant Bay to lay down that way. That takes not only strength and guts but skill, and experience doing it, I'd think, before you could inflict it on a horse as a correction for anything.
Its a tool for pros, correcting hard cases, I think.
Boy, I totally agree. Never in a million years would I try it. Not worth getting hurt or hurting the horse. I have never been a fan of breaking a horse's spirit myself, and that is one of the reasons some trainers do it.
I know with rearing horses it sometimes stops the rearing behavior but there is such a risk of injury to the horse and a whip across the front cannon bones will accomplish about the same thing.
I'm a real wimp - I talk to my horses and explain that I don't care for their behavior - not that they pay alot of attention to me :)
I haven't had one rear up that was more than about two months old. Easy to solve at the age when you can still pull them back down again.
Yes, it's not generally a problem - occassionally with a high spirited baby being led out to pasture but no threat intended on the horse's part. I don't think we'd own an adult horse that didn't get over that real quick.
He looks like a sweet old man. Can you keep him?
Of course we can... I'd just be surprised if he isn't missed by someone... He seems quite familiar with the comforts of life, including the couch.
Although, they have let him get a little thin, and a little itchy, hair all thin in the back. Not itching so much after a bath, but I need to get him on Advantage.
Hey I got guts and when I'm mad I'm strong:')
Hair NO
Mack NO
Duchess NO
Sarah Lee's Trainer NO
My trainer HELL NO!!!
and if I get dumped it's my fault and not the horses because I didn't watch for "signs" and stop a thought before action
NO it is, sigh but Sarah Lee not skating. I still may shoot her (just kidding-kind of:') Maybe if we ever meet up one of you "experienced guys" can show me how though? Please?
As you can tell I had a bad day. I know I'm not indispensable but to find a replacement for me less than an hour after I turned in my resignation.....? That hurt:') It reminds me when I was leaving home and moving my stuff out of my room and my sister was moving hers in
It was nice at the stables though. They all got put back in the pastures. I wish I had brought my camera. I had gorgeous action shots:')
Most of us have never done such a thing. Becky has once, we'll see if she thinks it's wise for you, I don't want to put words in her mouth.
This isn't something most riders do. It isn't something most people would want to do, it's an extreme method professional horsetrainers and old cowboys may use for unruly horses, but I don't think it is the magic fix you think it is.
You'll just have to work with her, learn as you go about your horse, and take what advice is given you by people you trust.
Sorry you had a downer at work... I have always been bummed when I have left jobs with what I thought were vital skills to do it and they never called me once to figure something out!
I wish you would have taken pictures too! We were just about to go out and take some, it's sunny here and we were gonna take blankets off for a bit. They always run then.
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