This will be a long one. Hopefully it will not fall into the
TL;DR category, but my brain has been busy in last 48 hours and we've made some exciting progress.
So now, I'm going to tell you what the meaning of it all is. The meaning of life? Ha, no, I am sorry, as a biologist, I must inform you that life itself has no meaning other than a fervent race of genes to survive amidst a sea of incomprehensibly random events. I know, the truth hurts.
Rather, consider, what the meaning is behind all these tricks we do, all these little steps and coercions and coaxings that we present to our horses in the name of "training."
A friend of mine, a horse trainer for decades, encapsulated it in two words: horse training is
directing choices. You have to think, to plan, to set a horse up to succeed and to find the right answer to your question.
Every step is a fork in the road. If you choose the wrong fork, I will pelt you mercilessly with water balloons. It won't hurt you, but it will sure as heck be annoying and soon you will miserably concede that you went the wrong way.
If you chose the right fork, I will instead walk quietly with you hand in hand, the sun warming our backs in a companionable silence.
When presented with these options, unless you are heinously stubborn and just want to prove a point (i.e. if you are pony, a mare, or simply a pain in the ass. Or me.), you will quickly (or if you are Solo, eventually) choose the quiet sunshine over endless irritation.
Equine psychology itself fascinates me -- what on the surface seems to be a basic herd animal is actually, upon further exploration, a personality with complex, unique behavioural patterns with whom, if you take the time and effort, you can build an amazing relationship that will change your life forever.
What brings me to all this esoteric pondering today is a 15-20 minute session I spent in the round pen last night with Encore. Like Solo, I have no idea how he was started or how many owners he has had. Because he was a racehorse, I can make some educated guesses and based on what I have been told by CANTER and what Encore himself tells me, his trainer was a good egg and he has not been beaten or mistreated at any point during his life.
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Not my round pen. I wish. |
This was only his second visit to the round pen. Let me tell you how much
I love round pens: perhaps my favourite training tool, I haven't had access to one for three years. But it was invaluable during my early years with Solo and building our relationship.
With Solo, though, in the pen I was dealing with fears and anxiety. A three-year stint of "I promise I will not beat you with a whip EVER." Defeating blue tarp terror. Showing him a leader could be a benevolent friend and partner. As a result, he gave me his whole heart and trust and we have never looked back.
Encore is different. In our first session, it was clear that he had no concept of round pen work, it was just a small circular paddock to him, around which he trotted randomly while watching the other horses over the fence. I felt him out, introduced him to the very basics of changing direction and stopping at liberty, noted his marked resentment toward the longe whip, and left it at that.
Last night, I focused on one goal: you will not move
into the pressure of my aids and you will stay out on the rail ALL THE WAY AROUND the pen. He likes to trot the rail on one half, then cut across the other half on a dividing line between me and the rail. If I push him out with my body, he just gets mad, pushes back and rushes by.
Now, I know how to round pen a horse. I know how to train a horse to give to pressure (about which Encore is excellent in hand) and I know how to read a horse's body language. I know how to wait the horse out and achieve the important "join up" moment in which the horse has recognized and accepted that you are, in fact, in charge and he is willing to concede the point and trust your leadership.
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Yeah, pretty much like that. |
But his belligerence about staying out of the center had me a bit puzzled. He clearly did NOT respect the pressure of my aids and pushed right back. And when I say pushed back, I mean he pinned his ears, wrinkled his nose, dropped his head and let fly with bolting bucks of rage like a rank two-year-old, both back feet pointedly flying in my direction at about my head height. This is the equine equivalent of saying, "Lady, go f*ck yourself." Not exactly what I expected from the doe-eyed pleaser and an obvious red flag that our partnership was not quite there yet.
One of the ladies riding in the ring next to us commented, "Oh my, doesn't he feel good tonight!" I laughed quietly and said, "Well, he is certainly throwing an impressive temper tantrum!" I am quite sure that to everyone in the arena, it looked like I was simply standing there while my horse frolicked around the pen, instead of the complex psychological dance that was actually occurring.
My response was to do nothing. I simply stood still and maintained my body language of "I don't care how you do it, just keep moving forward in the direction I tell you." I didn't have the longe whip this time; after a conversation with lifeshighway about a stallion she used to own and a lot of thinking, I decided to just use my longe line as a throw rope.
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Horse is not thrilled with request. |
After each bucking fit, he would return to the rail and trot quickly, head pointedly turned to the outside in case I didn't catch the fact that he was giving me the finger before. Then, halfway around, he would swerve and cut off the end again. I would take one quiet step towards his ribcage and swing the end of the line towards him about a foot; even these small aids were very clear to him. This would set off another fit of bucking fury back to the rail -- he quite pointedly resented my assertion that I wanted to be the clear leader of the partnership; I wanted more than just him mostly going along with me simply because he is a kind, workmanlike type of horse.
This continued for about five minutes. I admired his cat-like athleticism, but stayed completely nonreactive to his antics and just kept him moving in either direction I wanted with a simple step or a tiny swing of the rope. Sometimes he would try to change direction on his own, another attempt to push back at me, which requires a quick response of cutting him off and keeping him traveling the way I chose.
Then, somewhere in his clever little brain, the switch flipped. In the course of four strides, he sighed, his trot slowed and relaxed, his nose dropped and he conceded the point by continuing quietly on the rail all the way around the pen. I quickly praised him profusely while keeping him trotting. He dropped to a walk, chewing and flicking an ear towards me and I let him, accepting his relaxation by releasing a little bit of pressure, showing him that yes, he made the correct decision.
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Photo by horsecentric. I hope she doesn't mind me using it, it's an excellent example of submission from her great work with her horse. I will remove it if requested. |
I changed his direction and lifted him back to trot. He pinned his ears for the first few steps, then his eye softened, his head dropped again and he agreed to trot quietly around the rail, even splashing through a puddle.
I waited; I wanted three things: I wanted chewing, I wanted the inside ear locked on me, and I wanted his nose on the ground. I wanted him begging to be allowed back in my herd.
Always a smart one, it didn't take more than a few minutes before I had them all and I quietly said whoa and removed all pressure by turning my back to him and staring at the ground. He turned, walked up, then stood beside me with pricked ears, expectant, but unsure what would happen next. I walked around his body, running hands and line over him. Then I asked him to follow me at liberty in a few small circles, which he readily did. But when we stopped, he dropped his head to snatch some clover, breaking his attention and showing me he wasn't quite done.
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Not me. White clothes around horses is crazy. |
I drove him softly away again, getting another ear pinning and a wrinkled nose, but they were half-hearted now and his trot remained slow. It didn't take more than a few laps before he showed me he was ready and I let him come back in. This time, I could walk around him and control not only his head, but his hips and his feet with my eyes and body without touching him. I could pivot him on the forehand or back him up or lead him forward in a circle and he stayed focused on me without my touching him or using a rope.
This was mission accomplished and it both thrilled and fascinated me. While my sessions with Solo had been about luring an anxious horse into trust, this had been convincing a confident, sassy horse to accept and give over his body control to me. Two different horses, two different personalities, and two different dances, but both partnership negotiations successful thanks to one small pen.
This won't be Encore's last session. We will repeat it a few more times and each one should get shorter. You may ask, why bother? Just ride and train him. To me, the psychology IS part of the training. The partnership I want with my event horse includes his mind, his heart, and his trust. This is the best way I know to acheive that, so I consider it an indispensible step in what I hope will be a long and fruitful journey with this continually surprising, ever-intelligent, unfailingly curious, and always wonderful horse.