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Bravery - Anyone else have a horse like this?

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  • Bravery - Anyone else have a horse like this?

    My horse is either very brave or ADD. When we come up on something he is not sure about, he'll get very tall and look very hard and be very concerned and I begin to wonder if this is the moment he is going to show me just how fast he can really run (ex steeplechaser). So I'll be very calm and pat him and tell him it's OK and then suddenly, he'll look straight ahead to where he is going, completely relax and act like nothing ever happened.,...often before we even pass whatever boogey-man he was all worried about. I know what it feels like to ride a horse past something scary and this is different. He just decides he is going to ignore it and he never looks at it again. Like throwing a switch.
    What amazes me is how he will obviously be ready to panic and then just turns it off with no after-effect.
    "The mighty oak is a nut who stood its ground"

    "...you'll never win Olympic gold by shaking a carrot stick at a warmblood..." see u at x

  • #2
    Training or trust. I've had the feeling when a horse is about to spook and a milisecond before that she will be quick enough to stop the flight instinct and hold her ground. You just feel the tenseness, the spook deep in her, but she just flinches.
    Proud member of People Who Hate to Kill Wildlife clique

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    • #3
      Sounds to me like you're just describing a horse.

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      • #4
        I have a TB stallion who does this in his field. I call him my watch horse.

        He does that whenever anything disturbs his little domain. . . a person walking down the street ( a rare occurence here ) a new cow in the field across the street, a dog or other form of wildlife that he considers "new".

        I figure he is just contemplating whether it is a problem or not. If not, he just goes back to doing whatever. If he deems it a problem, he will run back toward the barn area and stop to face whatever it is.

        I have never seen this horse spook at anything. I think it's rather intelligent myself.
        "I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you..."

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        • #5
          What a good boy
          \"Tomorrow is a new day with no mistakes in it.\" Anne of Green Gables

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          • #6
            I've always wondered if it is tied to herd rank at all - my alpha mare will pretty much walk by/through anything, with perhaps some caution if she needs to assess the footing, but she rarely spooks. Doesn't matter if she's first or last in the group riding out - she has an innate confidence. My omega mare is happy to walk boldly in front on a group ride, until she sees something out of order, then she pretty much says "someone else please go first!!" If there is another horse in front of her, she'll ignore the scary thing (or not) depending on how that horse reacts. Keeps me on my toes!

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            • #7
              Originally posted by twofatponies View Post
              I've always wondered if it is tied to herd rank at all - my alpha mare will pretty much walk by/through anything, with perhaps some caution if she needs to assess the footing, but she rarely spooks.
              My very alpha gelding is the same way...very confident boy! He will puff up but hardly ever spooks or shies. If he is given the choice he will go investigate.

              I am anxious to see how my 2 year old filly turn out. She is pretty low in the pecking order of the herd but is not spooky. She always investigates and is definitely a calm thinking type.
              Animals are not disposable!!!
              http://www.pawsnela.org

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              • #8
                My horse is very in tune to the sound of my voice. I can relax him by telling him it's ok, I really do believe he trusts me.

                Also when he is scared of something he will freeze, stand tall, and look.......then he will actually walk towards what he is spooking at! As if he wants to get a better look. Lol.

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                • #9
                  We used to have on at the barn when I was a teen that we called Puff The Magic Moron. He never ever really spooked at anything...but once in a while if something was spooky...he swelled up like a puffer fish, LOL! His eyes would bug out and he'd inhale like a vacuum cleaner until he'd swell his belly up 2x larger and then just stare at the creepy thing all poofed up like a moron. And he would. Not. Move. A. Muscle.
                  He was a REALLY good boy...but that reaction always reduced me to snorts and giggles. After he figured oout the creepy thing he;d relax and woosh all the air out and continue on as if nothing had happened.
                  You jump in the saddle,
                  Hold onto the bridle!
                  Jump in the line!
                  ...Belefonte

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                  • #10
                    Not that I have worked with a whole pile, but I loosely group all the horses I've ridden into "lookers" and "bolters".

                    Yours sounds like a looker. My Clyde is a bolter. Obviously, one is considerably more socially acceptable than the other.

                    The weanling I raised was a looker. He'd get really tall, flick ears around, maybe snort or blow, then come right back to me.

                    The Clyde, she NEVER does that head-up thing. Now that her training has progressed much further, she knows enough to trust me, so she doesn't bolt. Keeps her "spook" inside. People think her name is ironic now...
                    Lifestyle coordinator for Zora, Spooky, Wolfgang and Warrior

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                    • #11
                      We used to have on at the barn when I was a teen that we called Puff The Magic Moron.
                      I actually laughed out loud Love it.
                      Lifestyle coordinator for Zora, Spooky, Wolfgang and Warrior

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                      • #12
                        LOL...awww, he was a good boy though. His real name was Dusty, a pale washed out colored Palomino gelding. Built like a Suffolk Punch though, thick as Aretha Franklin. So when he puffed up, he PUFFED UP!
                        You jump in the saddle,
                        Hold onto the bridle!
                        Jump in the line!
                        ...Belefonte

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by MistyBlue View Post
                          We used to have on at the barn when I was a teen that we called Puff The Magic Moron. He never ever really spooked at anything...but once in a while if something was spooky...he swelled up like a puffer fish, LOL! His eyes would bug out and he'd inhale like a vacuum cleaner until he'd swell his belly up 2x larger and then just stare at the creepy thing all poofed up like a moron. And he would. Not. Move. A. Muscle.
                          He was a REALLY good boy...but that reaction always reduced me to snorts and giggles. After he figured oout the creepy thing he;d relax and woosh all the air out and continue on as if nothing had happened.
                          I just can't stop laughing at that visual!
                          Flip a coin. It's not what side lands that matters, but what side you were hoping for when the coin was still in the air.

                          You call it boxed wine. I call it carboardeaux.

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                          • #14
                            Stacie, it all depends on what you mean by 'tall'. If you are referring to that giraffe necked 'What's out there stance' then that's fine. If my horse does that and then starts vibrating, then I start checking the terrain for emergency exit landings! I so hate the vibrating option that came with my model! Unless you get in there fast to prevent him from activating the take off button, you may be in for a ride!
                            "The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." Albert Einstein

                            http://s1098.photobucket.com/albums/...2011%20Photos/

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                            • #15
                              Ooo, Gal had the Vibrate For Monsters mode too! It's an odd feeling but a really good heads up to be ready to grip like a tick, LOL!
                              It was like she was a tuning fork for danger.
                              You jump in the saddle,
                              Hold onto the bridle!
                              Jump in the line!
                              ...Belefonte

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                              • Original Poster

                                #16
                                Originally posted by MistyBlue View Post
                                Ooo, Gal had the Vibrate For Monsters mode too! It's an odd feeling but a really good heads up to be ready to grip like a tick, LOL!
                                It was like she was a tuning fork for danger.
                                He doesn't vibrate, he hyperventilates Although lately he reserves that for cows. Although metal drainage pipes under the road seem to twist his mind a little, too.
                                The behavior that I find fascinating is that he doesn't actually convince himself its OK, he just stops caring about it often long before he even passes by the booger. All my other horses will check it out, go up to whatever it is, snort and think about it. Then maybe they'll relax and maybe they'll walk sideways past it. But this guy winds himself up and then just...stops. And he will refuse to look at whatever it was that scared him. I swear to god it's like he decides if he can't see it, it doesn't exist.
                                "The mighty oak is a nut who stood its ground"

                                "...you'll never win Olympic gold by shaking a carrot stick at a warmblood..." see u at x

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