Does Your Horse
Suffer From Farrier Phobia?
|
Imagine
yourself trapped in an elevator. Your
hands are tied and you are only able to
stand on one leg at a time. Let's also
add an annoying fly that insists on
using your nose for a landing site.
Sounds pretty uncomfortable and maybe
even scary if you're the claustrophobic
type, doesn't it? |

Bryan
Farcus, using one of his school horses,
demonstrates the scotch hobble, one of
the types of restraints that can cause a
horse to panic. |
Keep this in
mind the next time you see a young horse in
crossties, fighting flies in a narrow barn
aisle, anxiously awaiting a farrier. One thing
the owner and farrier should realize is that the
horse's skittish, jumpy, kicking, etc.,
reactions are not personal attacks directed at
them, rather, they are natural responses to the
situation.
An automatic
response to this behavior is to hold the horse
in place physically. Such approaches include
crossties, leg hobbles, "honda knots" and the
like, most of which prove dangerous to both
horse and handler. Some may argue in support of
these tactics and to accomplish the job.
However, these methods are long, physical
processes that never lead to a lasting fix.
Facing Fears
Through Body Boundaries
All horses have
two primal fears (phobias): being attacked and
being trapped.
Unfortunately,
for a horse, a new farrier can represent both.
It is only through a process of setting
boundaries for the horse's body in relation to
the handler's that this situation can be truly
helped with lasting results. This body-boundary
approach is currently being used by many
successful trainers/educators. Terms such as "WESN-Lesson,"
"Joining Up" or "Heeding" have been associated
with the basic idea of creating corridors,
tunnels and/or counter moves. They develop a
horse's understanding of where to be in relation
to the handler. The handler should maintain a
shoulder-by-shoulder alignment on the ground
with the horse. From this spot, the horse can be
directed or steered.
Once the handler
knows where to be, it is necessary to show the
horse his boundaries. The first step is to deal
with the horse's phobia. Being patient and
standing by his shoulder will help show him the
handler does not intend to attack. In addition,
being in a place that is familiar, such as a
grooming stall, barn aisle, round pen or arena
will show the horse there is no attack from his
surroundings.
Once this stage
of training has been successfully completed,
stage two addresses the horse's feeling of
entrapment. This can result if a horse loses its
balance and/or the ability to move. A horse must
feel he has an opening in a least one of four
directions: forward, backward, nearness or
farside. Restraint devices can trap him, causing
fear to take over. This concept is not easily
remembered in the heat of a frustrating moment,
especially when both the handler and farrier are
pressured for immediate results.
Redirecting the
horse to stand up or stand still can be done by
the shoulder-by shoulder boundary. Blocking with
light resistance in front of shoulders can gain
a standstill, or light encouragement or tapping
behind the shoulders encourages the horse to
step forward or stand up.
Side-by-side
movement should be tolerated in the early stages
of training to prevent a trapped fear taking
over the horse.
After the horse
relaxes and accepts his boundaries, it is then
time to ask for his feet. The single most
important thing to remember is to avoid a tug of
war. The goal is not how long the horse's
foot can be held up, but to teach him the
handler is the one in charge of setting it down.
This means setting the foot down before the
horse expects you to. He eventually will learn
to trust and wait for his foot to be put down
each time, whether it is in two seconds or two
minutes.
Farrier phobia
in horses is natural. It takes an investment of
time by the owner/handler working with the
farrier to train a horse to be calm and
comfortable. A humane approach to horseshoeing
is a method that can be practiced on every
horse. This "farrier-friendly"™ approach
represents the wave of the future. |