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Re: [RC] Rearing (slightly OT) - Barbara McCrary

I should have added that thought to my previous message.....between 4 and 6
are the "terrible twos" of the horse world.  I have yet to ride an Arab that
had stabilized his behavior much before age 7.  At 7 they start to look
hopeful, are better by 8, and are really settled by 9.  Sounds late?  Maybe,
but it has been consistently my experience.

Barbara

----- Original Message -----
From: "Maryanne Stroud Gabbani" <msgabbani@xxxxxxx>
To: <Lra1222@xxxxxx>
Cc: <ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, August 16, 2003 1:19 PM
Subject: Re: [RC] Rearing (slightly OT)


Four year olds are pretty goofy.  My experience is that a brain is
usually delivered somewhere around 5 years old and until then
everything is in the mail.  Right now I'm riding a 4 1/2 yr old gelding
and I won't make too many assumptions about training for another year.
Until that time, I figure he could do almost anything and it's up to me
to keep his rides at a reasonable threat level that he's constantly
thinking but gentle enough that it doesn't scare him to death.  If a 4
year old has been under "professional" training for 2 years, he was
probably started way too young and will need some really good handling.
  Do you have any VERY tall horsey friends around?  My now 15 yr old
mare reared once and tried once before that.  A 6'4" friend of mind got
on her after the first try and rode her until she tried again.  At 6'4"
against 14 hands, he was able to slide off her butt, put both feet on
the ground and be back in the saddle before her front feet hit the
ground. She never did figure it out....but she never reared again.
Maryanne
Cairo, Egypt

On Saturday, Aug 16, 2003, at 22:58 Africa/Cairo, Karen Sullivan wrote:


What are you asking the horse to do.....that causes him to rear?

I few other comments....is, how long at his horse been under saddle?
Sounds
like perhaps pushed too hard at a young age. At four,  you need to be
establishing GOOD habits, by making it easy for them to pay attention
in
very short lessons or rides, and having a buddy horse along on the
trail
also helps a lot.  Do NOT ask things of them they are not ready for...
Karen.
----- Original Message -----
From: <Lra1222@xxxxxx>
To: <ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, August 16, 2003 10:59 AM
Subject: [RC] Rearing (slightly OT)


Hi all. I am working with a 4 year old Arab gelding who has had 2
years of
"professional training." He behaves really well for a while, then acts,
well, FOUR, and then is good again. He was trained for hunter
pleasure, then
got 7 months off, and I have been working him for about a month now.
He is
EXTREMELY smart- when he learns he can't get away with one thing, he
tries
something else. OK, so down to the problem-- his new evasive tactic is
rearing-- which I HATE!! I can deal with bucking and spinning, which
he also
tries occasionally, but not rearing. I don't want him to fall over on
top of
me, ya know?! I have checked saddle fit, teeth, etc. and can't find
anything
that may be causing pain. I really think he is just acting his age! I
just
want to find out how to stop the rearing before one or both of us gets
hurt!
Any ideas? He is not my horse, but I do work him 3-4 times a week. I
try to
vary the routine so that he doesn't get bored, hoping that will help
with
the problem. He has reared about 4-5 times now, and I am sick of it.
As far
as trying to keep him moving forward, I try- he will slam on the
brakes just
to rear and spin. AUGGGHHH! Okay, this is long enough, just trying to
give
some background info. Thanks in advance for your help-- ya'll are a
wealth
of info, so I figured someone would have an idea!!!

Lindsey M21756



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Replies
Re: [RC] Rearing (slightly OT), Maryanne Stroud Gabbani