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[RC] BIting Horse at Ride - recklessheartranch


I'm afraid I disagree somewhat with the majority on this matter.

When I'm trying to visualize the picture, I see the (soon to be)biting horse on 
one side, another horse/rider (the OP's friends)on the other side. All are 
eating. Right there is a red flag -- horses are EATING.

Then the OP and her horse came up and put herself in the middle. The owner said 
"Be careful, she bites," but the OP still put herself in the middle. Then she 
turns herself away (exposing her side)...basically turning her back on a 
strange horse who she has just been told BITES AND is eating.

Gosh, guys...

Bites means...BITES! Rather than mull over exactly what the mare bites and 
when, I would have simply taken my horse on the other side or to another 
location entirely.

Of course, the owner of the mare should have taken HER mare away when someone 
ignored her warning, and I suspect she will do so in the future.

But, in terms of education, people need to be educated about how to conduct 
themselves around strange horses (this includes children), just like they 
should be taught how to conduct themselves around strange dogs. Unless I know 
the horse well, I give wide berth to ALL strange horses -- both the front end 
and the back end. And I keep my horse away from them as well.

As several people have pointed out, horses are inherently dangerous, and we 
must never, EVER forget that. You can get hurt by even "well-socialized" 
equines.

The OP says "we weren't crowded," but what people consider "crowded" and what 
horses consider crowded can differ. What is acceptable "horse space" is 
generally bigger than people space. A smart horseman knows this.

The owner told the OP the horse bites -- why in heaven's name did the OP 
continue to put herself in such close quarters (close quarters defined as "the 
horse can reach me from here")? AND there was food involved (horse food)-- 
always a potenial for conflict.

Horses are large, powerful creatures. They are not toy poodles. You should 
ALWAYS be on guard when around them. And you can get hurt. Don't trust the 
horse to take care of you -- the HUMAN is suppose to be the smarter of the two.

And when the owner tells you to beware, BEWARE! 

Something similar happened to me afew years ago. I had to board a broodmare and 
her foal at a local stable while I went away for 3 weeks because the foal 
needed regular attention. I told the owner, a man who fancied himself as quite 
a horse whisperer, that the mare was rather aloof and to just leave her be -- 
someone constantly trying to "mess" with her and be her friend just seemed to 
annoy her. I'd had this mare for several years and we had done fine together.

When I came back I noticed a large scrape on the man's face, right on his 
cheekbone. You guessed it -- he insisted on petting and fussing with the mare 
while she was eating her grain and she turned and whacked him one with her 
teeth.  I had zero sympathy for him. (for the record, she had never done that 
with me -- the worst she'd ever done was pin her ears).

Why not just consider this a lesson learned (by the OP)? No permanent damage 
was done, and if this is the only time she suffers a horse-related ouchy she 
should consider herself pretty lucky, or if there is an informal way to let the 
owner know that she simply needs to keep her mare away from everyone, 
especially those that do not heed her warnings, then that might be an option.

I think the safety of other riders at rides can best be served by paying 
attention when the owner of a horse warns you away...

Katrina 




Katrina O'Neal
Reckless Heart Ranch
822 Estates Loop
Priest River, ID 83856
(208)265-4837
recklessheartranch@xxxxxxxxxxx

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