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Behavior help please! Bolting when turned out

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  • #21
    Stuff some cookies in your pocket. Show the horse they are there. Walk to the turnout gate. Get his attention on the cookies again. Walk him in through gate, turn him to face gate (show him cookies again), close gate so that gate is between you and the horse (for safety). Latch gate. Take your time. Drop the cookies on the ground, remove halter or unclip lead. He will be so focused on eating the cookies off the ground that he won't bolt away. Repeat each time you turn him out until he is solidly in the habit of inspecting the ground after halter is removed. Then give cookies only occasionally after that.

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    • #22
      I begin in the stall. When I put them up at night, the youngsters are eager to get to the feed therefore, are impatient. I use this time to teach them to stand patiently until the halter is off. If they go to whirl around, etc. then the next time I keep the halter around the neck until they stand quietly. Then I let them go. It's worked for me for a long time.
      Why do those who feel a tyrant was elected as President, seek to disarm the population?

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      • #23
        Originally posted by Watermark Farm View Post
        Stuff some cookies in your pocket. Show the horse they are there. Walk to the turnout gate. Get his attention on the cookies again. Walk him in through gate, turn him to face gate (show him cookies again), close gate so that gate is between you and the horse (for safety). Latch gate. Take your time. Drop the cookies on the ground, remove halter or unclip lead. He will be so focused on eating the cookies off the ground that he won't bolt away. Repeat each time you turn him out until he is solidly in the habit of inspecting the ground after halter is removed. Then give cookies only occasionally after that.
        Watermark Farm, I was going to reference you in my post about my reformed horses for this suggestion you made last year to my post on this very topic. Works like a charm!
        We're spending our money on horses and bourbon. The rest we're just wasting.
        www.dleestudio.com

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        • #24
          Originally posted by DLee View Post
          Watermark Farm, I was going to reference you in my post about my reformed horses for this suggestion you made last year to my post on this very topic. Works like a charm!

          So happy this continues to work for you DLee!

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          • #25
            OP - at the first hint of the kind of behavior you are describing, I will make the horse walk back out of the paddock with me and then back in, as many times as it takes before the horse stands calmly with his head down waiting politely for me to take the halter off. I don't tolerate any head raising, looking around, or tenseness. Any of that behavior just means that we keep leaving and re-entering the paddock until the horse can politely have his halter removed.

            I expect horses to enter the paddock, circle around me to face the gate (which I am in the process of pulling closed as they make the circle back to face the gate with me still holding the lead), and then stand politely with head low and relaxed while I let them loose.

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