I've
learned several things this week.
Whip on
my super-special-once-in-a-while-Starbucks-drink doubles the calories of the
beverage.
It takes
a year to put the pieces of your life back together after a major life
transition.
Farley is
seriously freaked out by pigs.
I've
already set up the scenerio, so if you haven't read my previous post, please go
back and review.
I believe
that I was mounted, the pigs were lurching towards me in an ungainly way (have
you ever seen a market hog gallop?) and Farley was looking like the cover of a
Black Stallion novel.
An
important thing to realize as I go through this scenario is I have a 13 year
old been there, done that horse. She's
not a green horse. How does this affect
the situation? She's not a spooker or a
looker. Where with a green horse,
depending on the personality and where we were in the training I might
encourage some curiosity, or insist that the horse ignore the distraction. At 13 and many many miles under her belt
(girth), I give Farley some "rein" and some trust. Meaning that if she insists something is
worth looking at, I will let her contemplate it before asking her to move
on. It's never a good idea to totally
put your wellbeing in the hooves of a flight animal, BUT she has saved my skin
more than once, has shown good judgement and has earned the right to check out
a situation if she wants, and it is safe.
If something weird happened and I fell off or had to let go of her, we
were in an extremely safe environment.
The
second thing to keep in mind is that she is an ENDURANCE horse. She has a job. Her job is not to explore new things and play
games. I don't want to create a
situation where My horse sees something novel and insists on going through the
charade of "I'm scared" because it gets a predictable response: ie,
work stopping, a game that comes with treats.
Again, this isn't a green horse that needs to learn that the world is
safe and I'm the leader. There are many
circumstances on the endurance trail that the horse will encounter something
unexpected and scary and MUST ignore it and carry on with the minimum of fuss
and time.
Based on
my goals for an endurance horse (ignore distractions, but not experience
internal stress for doing so, and think past obstacles with a minimum of
direction from me) I handle situations like the pigs that will increase the
likelihood of getting the end behavior at rides --> which means that we
practice how we play.
Why would
I pounce on the opportunity to play with pigs, something that I had an inkling
would provoke the biggest fear response in Farley that I've seen in 5
years? Because she's an endurance
horse. Just like my comment months ago
about the importance of being able to go home at speed because if you can't
canter to the barn at HOME in control, how are you going to control your horse
at the start of the ride, if you can't deal with a novel, scary situation at
home, how are you going to deal with it on the endurance trail? And you will have to. I've seen and done the weirdest things at
endurance ride, including cantering next to railroad tracks in the desert and
having to pass a freight train yard with locomotives blowing and moving and we
even raced a train at one point. Farley
had never seen a train before.
The first
question was: Stay mounted or dismount?
Normally
the answer is stay mounted. Know thy
horse. Farley is a spooker in place, not
a bolter. HOWEVER, she was seriously
freaked AND it had been awhile since I had ridden her, AND these pigs were very
used to horses and were likely to run up to her and go under her belly or sniff
noses. Getting off was a perfect
opportunity to.......Review whether I still had Respect on the Ground.
Horses
that invade my personal space piss me off.
I can confidently say that any of the horses I have owned would
willingly jump on a cliff if there was a cougar chasing them, than invade my
personal bubble. Invading my space
results in an IMMEDIATE, rememberable reprimand that makes clear in no
uncertain terms that it is NOT OK to come into my space uninvited. I tend to not touch my horses reassuringly
when I'm on the ground and they are spooky because I don't want them to
recognize being close physically to me as an appropriate response if they are
scared. I use my voice when necessary,
and I do use a firm hand on the neck or shoulder of the horse to use as a
buffer that can help push me out of the way if they unthinkable happens and
they do try to go over the top of me. I
was trail riding with my aunt early in Farley's career and she wasn't very
thrilled to go over a creek. I got off
and asked her to cross. My aunt said in
amazement that Farley actually seemed to change direction in mid-air to avoid
interfering in my space.
Dismounting
during the pig situation was the perfect situation to review whether Farley had
forgotten the lessons of "thy shall not squish Melinda, no matter what's
chasing you".
Now
what?
Like one
of my readers commented in the previous post, I tend to talk to the object
instead of the horse. Again, I want to
reward the horse for switching over to a calm thinking, working brain and tend
to completely ignore the horse when it's snorty and doing an arab
impression. Horses that lower their
heads, start chewing, or start paying attention to me and sighing get
attention. Horses that are behaving like
idiots do not. Especially if they are
seasoned 13 year olds.
I like
following scary objects. It's how we
started working calves in that reining clinic I went to and I tried doing the
same thing to pigs. Except the pigs kept
running up to us to say hello. LOL. We walked in circles and long lines away from
and towards the pigs. Mostly ignoring
them, but I just "happened" to make sure that they were a central
feature in our "random" figures.
I was
feeling quite proud of myself. Farley
started looking relaxed and I was about to hop back on and then......the pigs
got out of the gate.
Crap.
I'm not a
pig person. To say the least. During showmanship round robins I always
gritted my teeth during the pig portion, picked the small brown breed and
prodded it around the arena in front of the judge hoping hoping hoping my pig
didn't get in a fight and needed to have the stewards rush over with the
plastic boards to break it up.
"Here
piggy piggy piggy. Here piggy piggy
piggy."
It didn't
work.
I walked
Farley out of the arena and attempted to herd pigs.
Which is
a lot like herding cats.
I yelled
and shouted and flapped my arms and ran at the pigs, Farley trailing behind
me. When the pigs looked at me with
their squinty eyes and decided to herd me instead, Farley and I retreated to
the safety of the drive way and studied the oinking ham and bacon and legs and
got the girl whom they belonged too. She picked up a a crop that was next to
the arena and expertly directed them back into the arena (a technique I was
able to copy when the piggies attempted the same great escape when I exited the
arena after my session).
It was
nice that the pigs naturally provided me an opportunity to do something that I
consider important after the neutral interactions where all parties involved
are calm. Now, I act like a maniac, not
acting calm at all and usually whatever critter is in front me, whether cow,
calf, sheep, or pig is bouncing and dashing around --> all while IGNORING
Farley completely. Farley knows that if
not given instructions, than no matter what I'm doing, even if it looks
completely insane than she is to do.....nothing. Thus, if my back is too her and I'm choosing
to chase scary things and yell like a banshee with aggressive body language but
I'm ignoring her....she is not to react.
Again, this is behavior that is built over years and many different
situations. And I use all sorts of novel
situations to present themselves to reinforce it.
I tend to
use NATURAL situations that present themselves, rather than artificially set up
situations. If the pigs hadn't gotten
out, would I have run around yelling and darting around in the tight space they
had gotten into with Farley trailing?
Probably not. Would I have let
the pigs out on purpose to play with them?
Probably not.....but would have made a point to ride past the pen. On the other hand, I try not to overface my
horse with a situation that I know they don't have a foundation to be
successful in. Thus, if a huge,
rumbling, piece of farm equipment pulling a rattlely, tipsy, swaying trailer is
coming down the road and I know that we've just worked through "normal
vehicle" issues, than I might chose to turn off the road and make a non-issue
of it by taking a grazing break or choosing an alternative route where my horse
doesn't have to deal with a situation she's unready for. Is that horse ready for an endurance ride? Perhaps not.
I like to see my horses handle novel, strange situations with a minimum
of fuss 80% of the time before taking them to a competition. Does it mean that my horse never has a melt
down? Of course not. But what it means is that TYPICALLY my horse
reacts in a way to novel situations that does not put me, her, or the riders
around us in danger.
I mounted
back up.
It was
time to go back to work. My goal before
mounting was 20-25 minutes of walk trot dressage. Now, considering the time spent on the pigs,
and the fact that I feel like horses go through self control fatigue, just like
humans and dogs (see Tess's blog a few months back for more discussion on that
topic), my goal was a few laps of good, relaxed walking on the bit.
There was
of course was one more big spook, as the pigs moved around and I gently
insisted that we focus on working.
Everyone
handles difficult situations a little different, depending on what they do with
their horse, their comfort as a rider, and the individual horse. There is certainly more than one
"right" way to handle this situation.
Would my approach work with every horse?
Probably not. I tend to chose
confident horses that aren't drama queens, even if they are spooky. Even Minx, who spooked, spun, bolted, and
dumped me all the freakin' time was basically a confident horse that was just
reactive --> I just never could get my neurons to fire as fast as hers. If I had to reassure an unconfident horse
through every little thing on the trail I would probably give up endurance and
decide to do 100 miles on foot instead :).
So, this approach seems to work well with the horses I get along with,
which is probably a certain personality in the first place! However, I hope there might be a tidbit in here
that helps you work through a situation, even if how you apply it is different.
Does
anyone have different thoughts? Do you
disagree on any of the points above or have an alternative to one of my
decisions that has worked well for you?
What sort of weird situations have you gleefully put your endurance
horse through because you knew it would come in handy some day?