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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!unix!unix.sri.com!hannah
- From: hannah@pomponio.ai.sri.com (Marsha Jo Hannah)
- Newsgroups: rec.equestrian
- Subject: Re: horse doesn't like to be groomed
- Message-ID: <HANNAH.92Nov23121154@pomponio.ai.sri.com>
- Date: 23 Nov 92 20:11:54 GMT
- References: <4252@unisql.UUCP>
- Sender: news@unix.SRI.COM
- Organization: SRI International, Menlo Park, CA
- Lines: 35
- In-reply-to: wrat@unisql.UUCP's message of 23 Nov 92 15:48:48 GMT
-
- In article <4252@unisql.UUCP> wrat@unisql.UUCP (wharfie) writes:
-
- Hi, y'all. I'm a novice rider who pays for his lessons by
- working around the stables. One of the things I do is groom and tack
- up. There's this horse, Dollar, who doesn't like to be groomed. When
- I try to brush or curry him, he lays his ears back and tosses his head
- and his skin moves like there's flies on him. I've tried all different
- curries and brushes, too. I can usually get one side of him done
- before he decides he's had enough and starts running away.
-
- I'm not the only one who has trouble with this horse. He
- apparently doesn't like to be handled at all. I've been told just don't
- bother with Dollar and someone else will see to him, but I've decided
- to make this my Personal Challenge :-) so my question is:
-
- What could I do to get this horse to trust me enough to
- groom him, or make the experience more tolerable to him? I've tried
- bribing him with carrots...
-
- Many horses have very sensitive skin, and simply can't tolerate the
- standard brushes used in the obvious manner. First of all, check
- whether your tools and/or technique are causing a problem---use the
- brushes on yourself, on a tender area of skin like your throat or the
- inside of your arm, using the same motions you would use on the horse.
- Now, choose brushes and motions that don't make you wince, and use those
- on Dollar. Or discard the brushes completely, and groom him slowly
- and gently with just a soft rag.
-
- It might be useful to learn some of the TTEAM "massage" techniques,
- i.e. ways of manipulating a horse's hide to make him feel good, as a
- way of convincing him that being touched doesn't have to hurt. (This
- is also good advice for the other poster, with the ear-shy horse.)
-
- Marsha Jo Hannah Murphy must have been a horseman--
- La Honda, CA anything that can go wrong, will!
-