Reignmaker Miniatures
Well-Known Member
I posted on here a while back about Cruiser and how he had picked up right where we left off a couple of years ago when I started driving him again this year. I have been thinking it was all too easy and that made me think I'd better check my memory and see what I have done with him to this point. So realizing that I skipped over much of my normal desensitizing I decided to back him up a step or 2 and make sure our bases were covered. Now understand that I have driven him pretty consistently this summer and he has gone very well and made steady improvement in the cart while in the arena. However on Friday I decided to let him drag a tire over some rough terrain where I can not go with a cart. It started off very nicely, nothing to be concerned about and he seemed mostly bored by the whole thing. Great, I thought. No worries..... Right! After 10 -15 minutes of driving him around, over brush and rocks, tall grass and deep ruts I turned into the arena and we made a full lap around, about half way thro the second lap something changed. His head came up, turned slightly to look back and .. boom! We had a full out bolt, bucking, kicking and panicking. Why? I have no idea really, but of course he decided that the tire was following/chasing him and once he really started to run and buck it became airborne and that just confirmed his belief that it was a predator set to eat him. I lost count of the number of times he went around me before he stumbled and ended up on the ground. After doing a complete roll over (not a somersault thank goodness) he lay still, panting while I untangled him. I got him up and readjusted the harness and asked him to walk on. He did but he was shaking hard and blowing in fear. Good grief! Glad we found this out now not while we were driving cross country in the cart. So I worked with him (wouldn't you know it was late in the day and we had plans for the evening) until he would eat treats off the tire but he was still pretty worried if it moved. I have spent the weekend going back to start filling the holes I left in his original work. Instead of the tire I have him dragging a tarp in the round pen and he must pass the tire on every round. Now I have moved the tire closer to his track and the tarp snags it and pulls it a few inches on each pass and he will no longer bolt from that so we are making headway and I am sure he will soon breath that big sigh he does when he suddenly gets past a mental block and accepts a step in his training. The whole point of this story is to remind every one to watch for the holes in their driving horse's education and not to give up on a horse who has a fright. They are wired to react first and learn later if it was safe. If you are training your horse to drive be sure to try to introduce them to everything you can think of, imagine in your mind's eye what Cruiser's and my wreck would have looked like had I not decided to check his steadiness before putting him in a stressful situation while hitched to a cart.