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StableTalk - The UK's brightest on-line equestrian magazine, written by
riders for riders
Applied
Heeding: Handling Stallions
by Ron Meredith
One
of the biggest mistakes that I see people make in their
relationships with horses is failing to pay complete attention
to the horse they are handling. That's why heeding is the
best program I know of for working with a stallion. Heeding
quietly establishes the handler as the alpha presence in
the herd, the one everybody else in the herd has to pay
attention to.
You
gain the respect of the horse because you consistently ask
for each new thing in a fair and horse logical way. The
horse learns to pay attention to you because you are always
telling it what to do next. Walk, trot, forward, backward,
turn, stop, stand or whatever. The horse never takes its
attention off of you because you never take your attention
off the horse. There is a mythunderstanding in the horse
industry that men can handle stallions more effectively
than women because they're stronger.
The
reality of it is that horse training is a mental game played
in a physical medium. It is not about strength at all. It
doesn't matter if the horse is five times as strong as you
or ten times as strong as you. There is nobody strong enough
to match strength with a horse. Heeding is a mental game
that gets the horse on your side and working with you. It
is not about physical strength. When working with stallions,
you do not do anything different than you do when working
with any other horse.
As a
trainer, you are not a man or a woman. You are a presence.
As a thinking presence, you understand what actions are
horse logical in a given situation. And instead of telling
the horse not to do something after he's already started,
you constantly keep his attention of what you want him to
be doing in the first. If you have taken the time to become
the same kind of a friend to a stallion as you would with
any other horse, you can heed him around and do anything
you want including handling him during breeding.
If
you keep the horse's attention and get your heeding going
so well that the horse is used to staying at your shoulder
ALL the time, you can heed your stallion right up to the
mare when you are breeding and have no fight about it. You
can walk your stallion right past a mare and have him pay
no attention if you don't want him to. And you never need
to fight with him about anything. You have to mentally dominate
the situation, not physically dominate the situation.
You
must earn the horse's respect, not overpower him with strength.
I see a lot of people moving their horses around at the
end of a lead rope but the horse isn't really paying attention
to them and they're not telling the horse exactly where
to put each foot and when to move it next. If you're walking
a stallion around without paying full attention to him,
as soon as that stallion notices another horse and gets
interested in that other horse, you've lost control.
Now
you're in a bind. You're trying to regain control from a
horse that doesn't want to give up control. And when an
animal as big and strong as a horse decides to leave, you
have to come up with a real stopper. Too many people wait
until the horse is too far into this process and then they
start yanking and shanking and yelling and starting a fight.
And when you fight with a stallion, what you're fighting
about in his mind is who gets the next mare.
When
you take a stallion to a show, lots of times he gets all
excited and thinks, "Oh Lord, this just might be a Texas
bar!" So you just walk him around, heed him around, until
everything is boring. But if you stop to talk to somebody
and just leave him standing there, he'll probably start
to drop. That stallion starts daydreaming and has taken
his attention off the fact that you are in control. That's
not his fault. It's yours.
You
need to get his attention back, remind him that you are
in control, and you do that by quietly doing some heeding
to move him around. Walk, stop, back, walk, just keep asking
and changing what you're asking for often enough that he
has to put his attention back on you. When you get his attention
back, he'll put it away. If you want to talk to someone,
put your horse away first and then go talk to them. There
are three times when you stop paying attention to the horse
that you are handling whether that horse is a stallion,
a mare, or a quiet old gelding: never, never, and never.
If
you have a stallion that bites, you don't slap it or beat
it. Meeting aggression with aggression never works. If you
have a horse that bites and you try to slap it for biting,
it will eventually learn how to duck your slap and bite
you on the way down. Instead, just tie stabilize his jaw
with a drop noseband to interrupt the biting before it gets
started. If he's real persistent, even with the noseband
on, you can pinch his lip when he tries to put his mouth
on you.
After
a while, biting won't be part of his program anymore. Stallions
tend to react to situations the same way as human males
which is to attack when they're scared and to pout when
they lose. And that's exactly what they do. You can work
a stallion to the point where he decides that life ain't
worth living and then he'll just pout like a son of a gun.
Sometimes you'll have two or three days of pouting. But
I don't want to just pick on the guys. What mares do is
different, but that's another subject. It really doesn't
matter whether you have a stallion or a mare or a gelding.
What you really want is a horse that you like doing what
you like because it likes and understands you.
© 2000
Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre. All rights
reserved.
Instructor and trainer
Ron Meredith has refined his "horse logical" methods
for communicating with equines for over 30 years as president
of Meredith Manor
International Equestrian Centre, an ACCET accredited
equestrian educational institution.
Rt.
1 Box 66
Waverly, WV 26184
(800)679-2603
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