Each horse spooked right out of the barn.
After calming, he never truly relaxed but was responsive to what I asked of him and loaded onto the tarp after one spook learning that it made noise when stepped on.
Bandon spooked by going head-up, snorting, frozen rigid in space. The hardest thing for him was when we walked away from it, Bandon wanted to surge ahead.
Once he was calm he was super inquisitive, chewing his relaxed mouth, and totally trusting of me.
Czech spooked by running behind me and had a hard time getting out of that position. He was perfectly fine to let me handle whatever it was. Here the tarp and toys are up on the hill in front of him. Where Bandon & Spotlight couldn't take their eyes off the objects, Czech quickly decided not to take his eyes off me.
"You go first."
At the objects he was less eager to interact with them, holding his composure and remaining calm, just not interested in getting up close and personal.
He took the longest to convince to stand on the tarp and never quite got to a point of being happy about it.
Each horse reacted to the same situation so differently. I would have thought Bandon would take the longest to get on the tarp, and he did blow up the biggest, but he was the easiest to accept the new situation.
Not one of them minded being apart from the herd, even when horses in the barn were calling. They had no choice but to turn to me and work out what they saw in their mind as a bigger problem than being away from each other. Another sweaty, humid, muddy day spent well.
Before I leave this particular post, I feel like I need to clarify how I worked through this since there was no way to take video of how it all went down. First off, I believe doing work like this teaches me about how my horses react, how to help them overcome reactive situations, gives them some experience to draw on to condition them for better responses in the future, and makes us look to each other for trust. We worked mostly with forward and backward motion, circles if needed, until the horse was ready for more. Nothing was forced.
Second, I do not believe in simply desensitizing aka sacking out. I don't personally feel that scaring a horse on purpose over and over until it stops moving in response to that particular fear, is teaching anything and can create instability (especially if you are working Thoroughbreds). Same goes for forcing a horse to run every time it reacts, as punishment for a fear response, I don't believe that's a smart way to handle ex-racehorses.
I could be wrong but that's where my beliefs are at on the matter today based on what my horses tell me and I'll probably hold to that until they tell me something different.
“There is no way that the horse will ever try to take advantage of you. He’s as honest and as truthful as anything you could ever work with. He has no ego that gets in his way. He has no pride that gets in his way. He doesn't know what win or lose is. And those are the four things that get in the human’s way. It’s very sad. All the horse is trying to do is survive; he’s trying to make it. So I try to work with him like he was me, just like I hope he would work with me.” Ray Hunt
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