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has your horse ever got loose at a show

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  • #21
    Oh yeah...

    My horse figured out, in the most sneaky fashion, how to get loose!

    He would shuffle his feet backwards, slowly, to get to the end of his lead. And then he would lean back just right and bust his halter. This with us sitting right there at the trailer!

    He would give us a little sideways glance and off he'd go! Luckily the facility was fenced and gated and he flounced around behind the barns doing his best impression of a grand prix dressage horse!

    When it became apparent that he would be caught when he had had his fun everyone just stood there and watched him. One voice out of the crowd said "If I catch him can I keep him".... at that point I nearly said yes!
    Kanoe Godby
    www.dyrkgodby.com
    See, I was raised by wolves and am really behind the 8-ball on diplomatic issue resolution.

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    • #22
      It was at one of Murphy's first shows. I tied him to the trailer with one of those bungee cord things. The quick release end was on his halter. He likes to see what is going on so he stretched that sucker around to the back of the trailer, caught the hardware on the edge of the trailer and quick released himself. He trotted around a few trailers but luckily was easy to catch. I no longer use to bungee cord ties.
      Crayola Posse - Pine Green
      Whinnie Pine (June 4, 1977 - April 29, 2008)
      Autumn Caper (April 27, 1989 - May 24, 2015)
      Murphy (April 28, 1994 - May 5, 2017)

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      • #23
        Yup! Twice!

        First show ever, I was nine years old, getting my number, and I heard over the loud speaker: small chestnut pony loose on the grounds..... My stomach flopped, I knew it was my naughty pony, I just about died of embarrassment, caught him quickly and safely.

        Second time, some seven plus years later, had said pony tied to the trailer ready to go home, just grabbing a quick burger at the stand, and as I was walking back, I saw my trailer but no pony! I had tied him up with his head bumper on and I had found out that he could slip that sucker off in a second.

        Thank god he just wanted to visit other people and had gone on a nice little stroll visiting and someone had caught him. Lol they thought it was cute....

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        • #24
          O ya.... It was at my very first Horse show at the county fair that my mare decided to head for the hills. I was 8 at the time with a young arab. She wasn't scared of the fair itself, but more or less went into a panic when her buddy went into the barn and out of sight without her. Miss mare decided to take off at a full gallop away from me and the grass she was eating, tore right past her buddy in the barn and out the other end. I ran after her and she stopped not too far out of the other end of the barn at the food stand just standing there calm as could be. The people there had doritos which she loved, so she stopped in when she heard the chip bags. Gotta love em!
          Who say's your best friend has to be human?

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          • #25
            Knock wood, once, in 49 years of showing. At the Utah State Fair in the late 90s- I was showing out of my trailer in lieu of getting a stall, as I'm only 30 minutes away, and didn't have classes every day.

            Horse tied to trailer, contentedly munching hay, and I was chatting with a friend, probably 50 yards away but within eyesight.

            Freak thing, he just happened to brush the snap on his lead rope in such a way that it failed, he found himself loose, and, well, going to look for fresh grass would be a nice change of pace.

            So he started off at the walk, while I approached at an angle to try and head him off, and soon he was trotting, and right out the fairgrounds gate into a Salt Lake City neighborhood, no panic, but a purposeful trot.

            I just stopped at the gate and watched him trotting a couple of blocks up the road, figuring he'd soon decide to try out a lawn. Instead, he stopped, looked around, decided discretion was the better part of valor, and turned around and trotted right back to me.

            He was a good horse, in more ways than one. And no worse for wear, I had plenty of time to groom, tack up, and place 2nd in the particular class.

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            • #26
              Yes, and it got blogged by another COTH'er: http://www.horsechannel.com/life-wit...-jamboree.aspx
              The Evil Chem Prof

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              • #27
                No, I have never had a horse get loose on me at a show. The few times I have fallen at shows by horses always stand still while I get up, and I have never had one get loose from me inhand.

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                • #28
                  Yes, we were entered in a walk class at my horse's first show. Horse was thus going in a halter with leadrope. Boss was holding horse while I mounted. Western saddle slipped, horse spooked slightly, saddle slid further, boss dropped rope and horse bucked across the concrete, slipped and fell. I was running after her, talking to her and got hold of the rope as she stood back up. Once I had her she settled right down and let me undo the saddle.

                  She just had a few scrapes. Gave her some time to chill in the stall, eat, and forget about it. We did soldier on and do an Other Half Leadline (do not ask) class that afternoon and she was an angel.

                  Learned my lesson 1) tighten up that cinch and 2) don't have someone you don't trust to hang onto the horse hold the horse. I take full responsibility but I did learn my lesson.
                  It's a uterus, not a clown car. - Sayyedati

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                  • #29
                    Love the Captain Kirk story!

                    I've had mine get loose once years ago. It was Bam-Bam, my half-Arab, half-lunatic gelding. Tied at trailer while I was grooming before class. I dropped a brush, which bounced off behind me, and I turned to pick it up. Right then, somebody pulled in with a LARGE, barking dog, head out the window. Looked like a Rottie-something cross. Who takes a large, barking dog to a show? He already wasn't behaving and wasn't even out of the car yet. ??? Bam, who loved to discipline smart-alec dogs, grabbed his lead rope, undid his quick release (I hadn't put the end back through), and headed off at a good pace. I started after Bam and called, "Whoa, you idiot!" and he diverted in his dog hunt with that "Oops! Guess I'm being bad" expression and headed straight out the show grounds at a business-like trot. Chased him about 1/2 mile on paved state highway while having daymares of car vs horse wrecks. I HATED to give that horse a carrot bite when I finally got up near the dangling rope, but he was waiting for it and willing to head off again if no carrot produced. Bam had an interesting sense of humor at times.

                    Another show, I didn't have a loose horse, but I was walking across show grounds early in the morning when here came a big chestnut in a halter and about 4 inches of dangling rope. He looked scared, not mischievous like Bam. I made a noise like a cookie and started dramatically fishing in my pocket, and he immediately came over and shoved his 4-inch rope right into my hand, glad to find somebody in this crazy world who might be sane (and have cookies). Turned out, his person, who was in fairly close pursuit and showed up a minute later, had been bathing him, and she had him straight tied, picked up the hose, and turned on the water while the hose was on him. The hose, coiled up all night, went into explosive sneezing fits, and the horse took exception.

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                    • #30
                      Yes ~ Once ~ well that I know of ?!

                      Yes ~ once ~ well ??? that I 'know" about anyway ~

                      And while I WAS NOT AT THE SHOW YET ~ the trainer still blamed the 'escape' on me !!!

                      Showed that night and won our class but then shipped 'home' scratching from the next evening's class.

                      The next day his cuts and scrapes showed up in full force = nothing serious but a bit bruised and sore ~
                      Zu Zu Bailey " IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE ! "

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                      • #31
                        When I was a teenager, a friend and I lost one of my trainer's horses that my friend was leasing. We were taking pictures of him in the outdoor arena, and, in a moment of extreme intelligence, my friend decided to let the horse loose to trot around the arena. The arena that had no GATE, just a big opening at one end. At the end where neither one of us was standing. Um. That didn't go well. FYI, it's pretty much impossible to outrun a horse.

                        Horse of course ran out of the arena and then ran down the driveway and on to a busy road. He proceeded down the road to a gigantic hay field, where he galloped around for a while. Friend and I ran down there and watched him gallop around the field. The field was at the corner of two busy roads (the one he ran down initially and another one that was even busier). He eventually started to get worried and trotted over to me looking to be caught. Just as I almost caught him, some a-hole drove by and laid on the horn. Horse took off again, this time galloping back down the road toward the barn. He was in the wrong lane of the road, galloping towards traffic at the top of a blind hill. Anyone coming up that road would not have seen him and, if they had hit him, both he and the vehicle passengers would probably have been killed. It was pretty horrifying!

                        Some nice driver actually risked his own life to force the horse back on to the barn property at the top of the blind hill by wedging him over with his car. We closed the driveway fence to keep the horse on the property and eventually caught him. It was one of the scariest things ever. He lost a shoe but was otherwise no worse for the wear.

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                        • #32
                          My 4 y/o OTTB got loose at his first show two weeks ago.

                          He has been off the property several times, particularly to this venue, and was pretty chill about hanging out tied at the trailer. Our first incident occurred when a big red gooseneck stock trailer U-turned right past his butt (missed him by only about 3'). He understandably startled a bit-- I was right with him, but he wasn't close to pulling back or getting loose. But this was a sign of things to happen: Idiots who nearly run your horse over trying to park their rig perhaps aren't the brightest bulbs in the box. They parked ramp-to-ramp with my trailer, about 20' away.

                          I was late, in a hurry, sitting in a chair next to horse and trailer putting my boots on. DH was kindly applying baby oil to horse's feet. Then we hear massive banging as Red Trailer unloads its two drafty-looking crosses; my horse jumps a little bit, but settled. One drafty horse is immediately circled around on its 15' parelli rope, as Hubby was crouching under my horse's hind feet with the baby oil. My horse overreacted to the mass of horse coming at him, nearly stomped on poor DH, pulled back and broke the leadrope snap. My horse goes trotting down the driveway wearing halter and saddle.

                          I, in one sock and one tall boot, go sprinting after my horse yelling at hubby to jump in his truck and head horse off before he can make it to the main road. Thankfully there were horses turned out in nearby paddocks, and mine stopped to chat over the fence and let me catch him. But it's never a good sight to see your horse running off into the distance, tail aloft, as you struggle to run on gravel in a sock.

                          Idiots give a weak half-apology, I smile and say "Oh it's his first show, he'll get used to it," meanwhile wishing they'd had better sense to respect personal space a bit, or at least call "heads-up" if they were getting too close. Idiots later overheard saying the loose horse was my fault and clearly it was "my" first show experience and I needed to learn better. Yeah, ok. Hubby was furious (well, he did nearly get trampled), but I explained to him idiots are everywhere, especially at local low-level shows, and you just gotta deal with them.
                          “A clever person solves a problem. A wise person avoids it.”
                          ? Albert Einstein

                          ~AJ~

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                          • #33
                            Yes, my big hunter got loose during a tack change once and thundered all over the show grounds. After about 5 minutes, he returned to his trailer buddy and was caught. In the mean time, I was in the trailer changing. Of course, I wouldn't have missed my class... 1400# of appaloosa galloping around tends to stop things.

                            I once saw a stallion get loose at a local tie-to-your-trailer type of show. We watched him ON.PURPOSE run between horses and their trailer breaking their tie ropes to turn them loose. He actually put his chest into it. He turned half a dozen horses loose that way before they cornered him. It was an amazing sight of horse cognition. It I hadn't seen it myself I wouldn't have believed it. I think he was gathering a herd and planning to head for the hills

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                            • #34
                              Not at a show, but at a team practice. It was pretty normal to dismount, exit the arena, and take his boots off/loosen the cinch. He decided he wanted to go back to the trailer, which was maybe 500 feet away. The coach was screaming "LOOSE HORSE!!! LOOSE HORSE!!!". I just laughed as he stopped by his halter and stared at me. It was the look of 'mom, get me out of here'.

                              A friend had a horse get loose at a show. She tied her horse near mine, and I warned her the mare was known to kick. Friend wasn't too worried about it. Well mare decided she didn't like friends horse and went to town, friends horse pulled back and snapped the halter. The horse made it all the way into town (about 8 miles) before we caught up with her. Friend and a few strangers followed on horseback, I took my car and kept watch on the roads. They caught up with the loose mare trotting down the middle of the main road. My friend attempted to tie them next to each other again, I shook my head and just held onto my mare for the rest of the day.

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                              • #35
                                Unfortunately Yes. To make matters even worse, in the course of her being loose she managed to get 5 others loose as well and would have loosed more if a few people hadn't clipped their stalls correctly closed. I wasn't there though I had repeatedly warned the rider to not leave her unattended at her own peril. Rider had trailed Palmare with her green bean gelding. Tied them up to the trailer and went off to register for the show. Mare promptly relieved the greenie of his halter and sat back and broke her lead rope. Green bean took off for the hills with mare in pursuit. She made a circuit of the trailers and finding no one to let loose headed for the closest barn. Went down the isles turning everyone loose she could before she was finally caught with a bucket of feed. Usually people are willing to help catch horses but watching the golden palomino arab with flowing white mane and tail was far more important than actually catching her. I have never met a horse with such charisma, you want to let her loose to watch her move.
                                Adoring fan of A Fine Romance
                                Originally Posted by alicen:
                                What serious breeder would think that a horse at that performance level is push button? Even so, that's still a lot of buttons to push.

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                                • #36
                                  We leased one of our mares to someone for a show season and we warned the lady that the mare was a whiz at untying herself. I guess they either forgot that fact or didn't take me seriously enough. They tied her to the side of the trailer at a show. It was at nighttime, the mare untied herself and promptly went to an adjacent field to help herself to grass. They had a heck of a time finding a black bay mare in a dark field LOL.
                                  Susan N.

                                  Don't get confused between my personality & my attitude. My personality is who I am, my attitude depends on who you are.

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                                  • #37
                                    But you still rode the test OP! Good on ya!

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                                    • #38
                                      Yep, been there, done that, got the cooler.

                                      I was in the ring and saw out of the corner of my eye a horse that looked like mine that I had left properly tied to the trailer. "hey, that horse looks just like OH MY GOD IT IS HIM" and had this momentary confusion of do I stop and ask to be excused to catch my horse or...? Fortunately he just came up to the warmup and one of the trainers out there grabbed him. That was the last time I ever tied a horse somewhere and expected it to be there when I returned. I haven't not rented a stall at a show in years.
                                      Michael: Seems the people who burned me want me for a job.
                                      Sam: A job? Does it pay?
                                      Michael: Nah, it's more of a "we'll kill you if you don't do it" type of thing.
                                      Sam: Oh. I've never liked those.

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                                      • #39
                                        My mare was tied to the side of the trailer sleeping with all the weight of her head in her leather safety halter (the kind with the tab) and it just kinda stretched and her halter fell off. she just wandered off until I came back around after grabbing something from the tack room noticed her going off to a giant bush.

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                                        • #40
                                          Yep... my old pony got away from me after my trainer scratched all our classes because I went into the ring for my after warming up over the exact.same.course. and proceeded to forget where I was going and jump an oxer backwards. (Yes, I so deserved to get scratched for the day.) I'm pissed, pony's confused, and all the other horses are up at the ring. Pony is not usually attached to the other horses at ALL, would rather stand at the trailer and eat instead of be with the others. I guess she decided that today was the day to have separation anxiety, because as soon as I got the bridle off, halter halfway up her nose, she BOLTED up to the other horses, breaking both the halter and the bridle, and running over the rider who was standing next to said horse.
                                          Different flavors of crazy, but totally NUTS. You know its true. - GreyHunterHorse

                                          http://showertimecontemplations.blogspot.com/

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