Your Horse (UK)

Stop the spooks

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QHow do I deal with spooky behaviour from the ground? My horse is nervy and I would feel happier building up his confidence while I’m not on board. Suzanne Humphries, Suffolk

Emma says... This is the time to embrace your inner child! It’s no coincidenc­e that kids often appear to have seemingly spook-proof ponies. I put this down to children not over-thinking things, and seeing the fun in a piece of plastic on the floor, whereas for adults this is something that we have to ‘get over’ in order to have a spook-proof horse.

If we planted a flag pole in even the quietest horse’s field and then turned him out, chances are he would still initially spook at it. I think of it as life conditioni­ng, so we want to prepare our horses for whatever they might meet and show them how we, as humans, need them to act when scared so as not to injure us.

Embrace the mess

I’m lucky enough to be a messy person, so my arena at home never looks tidy. There are always tarpaulins, bags, balls, dogs, turkeys or whatever around, which conditions my horses to see many shapes, sounds and textures as part of their everyday normality. So when I then ask them to walk over a tarp or other obstacle, they aren’t defaulting to that initial shock of “it’s something new”. I think it’s a lot more frightenin­g and confrontat­ional to suddenly appear with a tarp in an arena than it is for the horse to walk over one every day on his way towards supper in his stable.

Ask yourself, “how can I get my horse to love this plastic bag”, rather than “how can I get my horse not to spook at this plastic bag”. This will naturally make you more creative in your approach and will keep you more positive, which your horse will gain lots of confidence from.

 ??  ?? Have objects around for your horse to see or walk past every day
Have objects around for your horse to see or walk past every day

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