Sunday 22 May 2011

Fir Tree Stud / Natural Horsemanship Update!

First, sorry for break in the blog. We have been too busy to get around to it!
Where do we begin...
Toby the lovely Section D pony we had for sale sold almost immediately to a lovely home in North Yorkshire.
Rubin, who you will remember is the remedial horse we have been working with. When we last wrote about him we had him long reining in the round pen. As this work continued Rubin struggled with the confidence to work with the two lines. We came to the conclusion it was best not to stress him by insisting that he followed the 'expected route'. Instead we looked at his strengths, he had no problem with dealing with the plastic bags on a stick, infact he was one of our best performers where that was concerned. He worked loose in the round pen with Janice beautifully, it was almost like dancing, and to say he was joined up, was an understatement!
With this in mind we introduced him to a dummy rider which he took to easily, and then trained him loose in the round pen with his friendly 'auntie lil' as she is affectionately known.
From here, we tried to introduce the real thing in the shape of Thomas. Rubin knew the difference and was too dificult for Thomas to mount in the round pen.
Knowing Rubin as we now did and having sucessfully introduced new concepts to him in his stable, (saddle, bridle & dummy) which is the place he feels the safest. Our instinct told us that if he was going to let someone mount him, that would be the place it would most likely happen. We were right. Rubin allowed Thomas to mount him.
The work we had done with the dummy was invaluable because the first time Thomas put his leg over and sat on, Rubin slightly relaxed, and seemed to understand what we wanted and stayed with us.
It clearly wasnt going to be a quick fix to progess from the stable to the round pen and his owner felt it was time to take him home with the view to returning when they can.
In his time with us we helped Rubin to:
Accept a headcollar easily
Pick up his feet
Allow the farrier to trim his feet
Have rugs taken on and off easily
We taught his owner strategies for catching him in the field when he resisted
How to lunge & long rein
Work loose in an enclosed area with people
Accept the saddle and bridle
and finally
Allow someone to sit on his back