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Look at the horrible monster that scared the bejeezus out of my horses today

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  • #21
    Clearly a vicious animal. They are lucky to have survived.

    There are cows in the next field over from my front pasture, and my new mare clearly thinks they are Martians or something. When they first came into view a few days after her arrival, she was doing a complete grand prix freestyle in the pasture, without benefit of music. Upper level movements, halt and snort, upper level movements, halt and snort, rinse, repeat. These weren't even trespassing cows, just over in their own field. She still after a few weeks will stand on absolute guard and watch those beasts. Obviously, they cannot be trusted.

    http://s276.photobucket.com/albums/k...tchingCows.jpg

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    • #22
      At one of our barn's Halloween parties one year, a neighbor dressed up a pony as a cow (they were dressed as cowboys). It was painted a weird red color with horns. OHMIGOD, the horses were completely freaked out!! And it was only an imposter cow. You'd have thought they could smell the pony underneat . . .

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      • #23
        Originally posted by Simkie View Post
        Oh, look at little Moo! He's adorable.

        My mare is good about most scary things (although she's never seen a cow close up) but she is TERRIFIED of hay bales in the field. Did you know that wild hay bales are horse eating monsters?
        Well, my gelding lives in CHAIR HELL. We have several folding chairs in the indoor arena and the one evil white rocker back chair. Anytime he sees a chair, he bows, goes sideways, and scoots away....And it's like Groundhog day, the next day, we start all over again.

        Apparently someone must have either thrown chairs at him as a child or sat in them and threw rotten tomatoes at him as he went past.

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        • #24
          My mare is COMPLETELY terrified of cows. Never had a bad experience in the 10 years I've had her, but thinks they will eat her.

          This fear has spread though...to multi-colored equines, as they must be related... So anything paint or appy is hidden from and/or attacked.
          Strong promoter of READING the entire post before responding.

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          • #25
            Add my PAINT gelding to the "Cows From Hell" camp. So embarrassing to board at a reining facility, with lots of cow savvy QHs and then, there's mine: heart-thumpingly, spin-and-run-terrified of a fat, Angus 4-H steer. Good thing we've moved to a less frightening barn--no livestock.
            Proud member of the "Don't rush to kill wildlife" clique!

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            • Original Poster

              #26
              Originally posted by jengersnap View Post
              My sincere best wishes. My CTBM took over a year to get face to face with them without wigging out.
              There is not a 12-step program on Earth for Tanager's phobia. He's 12 years old and has been living next to cows in all directions for six years now. A few years back I let the neighbor put several heifers in our pasture for a month. I finally had to ask him to move them out because my horse was getting more and more dangerous, a threat to himself and others.

              I once lost him walking down the road because the cattle in the pasture looked at him. He broke away took off galloping down the middle of the county road. I found him trembling in a field 1.5 miles away.

              At one point I had plans to take him to a cow clinic with a local trainer. This was after attending his horsemanship clinic and talking with him about whether my horse could deal with the cow clinic. I chickened out after listening to that GIANT LOUD voice inside my head that said, "DON'T DO IT!!!" It was not my time to die.

              My 4-year-old mare, on the other hand, is the most sensible girl ever. I may just have to do some of that "cowboy dressage" with her.

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              • #27
                That is the cutest "monster" I have ever seen!

                We had a mare in for breeding years ago and she had a big bald apron face with 2 ice blue eyes and she was turned out in the paddock beside my 5 mares. They spent the morning snorting at her, lined up 5 side by side in tight formation, with none of them breaking rank to eat or drink or move away from the safety of their herd!

                IN the end I had to stick a fly mask on her so they wouldnt see her face in order to get them to stop staring at her and doing nothing else!
                www.TrueColoursFarm.com
                www.truecoloursproducts.com

                True Colours Farm on Facebook

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                • #28
                  alpacas and llamas

                  Wait till your horses get a 'gander' at loose Alpacas and Llamas One day the farmer down the street had part of his herd escape and they went past three horse farms.. I mean you could swear that they were equine eaters for sure!!
                  Pao Lin

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                  • #29
                    oh dear.

                    Horses are so silly sometimes. Poor little guy- he's so cute!!

                    My super spooky gelding was turned out in a little paddock one day last summer (he had just gotten stitches so couldn't be turned out for real.) So a lady comes up our long farm driveway (there's more trail access up at the top of our driveway behind our farm.) However, this lady is riding in a cart being pulled by a little pony. cute, huh? Well Ironman didn't think so... He decided he wasn't going to wait around for this monstorous contraption to eat him, so he up and jumped out of the paddock! Thank god he was so freaked out he just ran into the ring. The lady in the cart saw the whole thing and was ooohing over how athletic he was and actually asked if he was for sale.
                    Horse power

                    Horse" pow`er\ (Noun) The extraordinary capacity of a horse to elevate the human spirit.

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