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Re: [RC] Dealing w/ a horse that won't pulse down due to excitement - Chris Paus

Ditto. I was going to suggest this!

The poor mare has reached sensory overload. She just
needs time and practice and patience. It will come.
It's one reason I took my young mare to a show. I
could care less about showing, but I figured the
experience of being around lots of other horses,
activities, etc., would be good practice for her.

Just keep at it!

chris
--- Karla Watson <karlawatson@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

She just needs more rides and more experiences with
big groups of horses. I wouldn't give up on her just
yet. It was just her first ride. Expose her to
places where there are lots of horses and tons of
activity. Attend some local poker rides or organized
trail rides. Keep going to endurance rides and try
to stay as calm as you can be. She'll get better
with more exposure. It just takes time, miles and
patience. 
-----------Karla Watson/Portland, Oregon
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Karen Casemier 
  To: ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Monday, August 02, 2004 6:52 AM
  Subject: [RC] Dealing w/ a horse that won't pulse
down due to excitement


  I did the 25 LD at Wolverine (Michigan) this
weekend - my first ride ever 
  with my Morgan mare. The ride itself went
wonderfully well, better than I 
  ever could have expected. She drank like a champ,
which she rarely does on 
  training rides, my pace was really good (I wanted
to get to the vet check in 
  2 hours and made it in almost exactly 2 hours),
and considering she was 
  riding without her regular buddy, did remarkably
well, calming down and 
  getting to business after the first few miles. I
was so thrilled with her.

  However, when we got to the finish back at camp, I
could not get her to calm 
  down. She became a different horse. She was
trotting circles around me, 
  bucking on the end of the lead line, etc. This was
not a metabolic problem, 
  but a mental one - she was so overstimulated by
all the other horses and 
  being back at camp (and probably hearing her buddy
call to her) that she 
  wouldn't drop below 70. I'm sure you can
understand how frustrating it was 
  to have such a great ride for my first time, on a
tough trail no less, and 
  then not get a completion not because of lameness
or metabolic issues, but 
  simply because she was too wired to reach the
pulse critieria. (She did 
  pulse down fine at the vet check in the middle of
the ride - it took me 
  about 10 minutes, but she was at 55 when they took
her pulse, and I thought 
  that was pretty good for her first time)

  Note that we also had an issue at the vet-in. She
wouldn't settle down for 
  that either, so we had to bring her buddy down to
keep her manageable. In 
  theory, we could have brought her buddy down for
the final check, but to me, 
  that would have just been a band-aid - I would
still have the exact same 
  problem the next time. I don't want to have to
bring her buddy to every ride 
  just to get her through the vet checks.

  I also believe this issue is deeper than simply
being attached to a buddy. 
  I've only had her act this way one other time
before - when I was acting as 
  an outrider at a combined training event. Exact
same thing - bucking, 
  rearing, wouldn't settle down, etc. It has
something to do obviously with 
  all the other strange horses (although again, she
did pulse down fine at the 
  check outside of camp).

  The only thing I can think of doing, is to start
round pen work with her. 
  I've been hesitant to do this in the past, because
this is very 
  *complicated* mare. Methods that work with other
horses often don't work 
  with her. However, as great as she is on the
trail, she will NEVER be an 
  endurance horse if she can't settle down for the
vet checks. And that would 
  break my heart, because it was clear to me that
she is capable of a lot more 
  than I originally thought as I rode her on Sunday.
I'm thinking if I do some 
  basic "herd dynamics" type of round pen work that
I can hopefully get her to 
  focus in on ME when she gets stressed, instead of
completely tuning me out 
  (which she was very obviously doing - you could
see in her eyes that she was 
  totally "off" mentally).

  If you have any suggestions, especially if you've
been through this with a 
  horse, please let me know. Except for that final
vet check, I was absolutely 
  thrilled with how my little mare did (she was a
bucking bronc at the start 
  of the ride, but I expected that and I do believe
that will get better 
  simply with experience). This mare and I have been
through a lot together, 
  and as much as I want to do this sport, it is just
as important that I do it 
  with HER.

  Thanks,

  Karen and Mazzie

 

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=====
"A good horse makes short miles," George Eliot

Chris and Star

BayRab Acres
http://pages.prodigy.net/paus

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Replies
Re: [RC] Dealing w/ a horse that won't pulse down due to excitement, Karla Watson