
Threats and Safety Zones
by Ron Meredith
I was young and pretty cocky when I started working with horses. Back
then, I figured that the first thing I had to teach a horse was that I
was the top dog. Then it was the horse’s job to pay attention to me
and do what he was told. Like a typical person, I was always thinking
about the end result I wanted and jumping right to telling the horse
what to do. If he didn’t do what I wanted, I’d go to enforcing my
supposed authority and make him do it. The horse had to acknowledge me
as the leader and understand that if he didn’t do what I wanted, there
were going to be consequences.
I hadn’t yet learned to horse-logically break whatever I wanted the
horse to do down into the smallest possible steps and introduce them one
by one in a way that the horse never felt threatened or attacked. I
hadn’t figured out that the real herd leader is the smartest, most
confident horse in the bunch, not necessarily the bossiest, nastiest
one. I hadn’t figured out that rather than being the scariest thing in
the horse’s universe, I really wanted to be the safest place to be.
If memory serves, one of the horses that changed my thinking about
training was a three-year-old Arabian stallion named Gydames. There was
a young girl who planned to take him into the show ring. Like most young
stallions, he had a tendency to be mouthy. So when they were walking
along, he’d duck his head like he was going to nip. She’d pop him
with this little tiny whip she carried. Then he’d look at her and
frown a little. And then they’d just go on. Her father, however, was
afraid of the stallion and afraid he was going to bite her eventually.
So he asked a local hot shot trainer to fix the problem.
My training plan was simple. I put Gydames on a lunge line with a
chain under his chin and began to startle him into having a good
attitude about being led. I’d poke him. Then he’d look and frown.
Then I’d jab and he’d frown. Pretty soon, I’m really working him
over and not letting him get away with anything. If memory serves, I was
standing right in front of him while I was making my point because the
next thing I knew, I was lying on the ground looking at the underside of
a stallion going over the top of me.
I still had a hold on the lunge line so I swiveled around and was
able to stop him before he got completely away. I knew I was hurt but
now adrenaline was pumping and that helped me ignore it for awhile. I
got off the ground, got the stallion turned around and started running
toward him which is the sort of thing pumped up young guys do when
they’re scared. I was still in startle mode so I still kept jabbing
him and making a huge fuss.
Then something about the sequence of events suddenly became crystal
clear to me. I realized that whenever I quit poking and spanking,
Gydames quit fighting, too. When I forced the fight, it only lasted as
long as I decided it was going to last. The horse was totally
frustrated. He was simply mirroring my behavior, responding in kind to
whatever I was doing. If I attacked, he fought back. If I quit, so did
he. For me, that was the beginning of some important learning about how
horses learn.
I finally got the stallion calmed down, figured he’d learned enough
for that day, put him in barn, and went into the house to think about
things. I’d felt several different hits when the horse knocked me down
but hadn’t really assessed the damage yet. I found bruises on my
thighs and my chest. He stepped on my right bicep and pinched it,
leaving a souvenir I have to this day. There was also a bruise on the
side of my throat that helped me become a born-again trainer. If Gydames
had set his foot down just an inch or so over to the side, my training
career would have abruptly ended and I wouldn’t be writing this.
So Gydames got to rest while I healed. And while I healed, I had a
lot of time to think about our training session from his perspective and
about what I might have done differently. Here are a couple of the
things I concluded I’d learned:
Be aware of the horse’s primary activity line. That primary line
runs the length of his spine and out the front and back. The horse’s
ears and eyes are on his primary line. When all else fails and he
can’t figure out what else to do, the horse will flee in the direction
his primary line is pointing. That’s just what happened when Gydames
got frustrated by my poking and slapping and fussing. The fact that I
was standing in his way didn’t mean a thing. He just went up and over
me to get away from my attack.
Work in the safety zone. Horses also have a secondary line that runs
from side to side about through their shoulders. If you stay near that
secondary line, you’re in the “safety zone.” The horse can’t
attack you with his front feet or his back feet and if you’re paying
attention to what he’s doing with his head he can’t get you with his
teeth. Stay by the horse’s shoulder, control his head, and you have
control of the horse.
This is a concept I’ve used even with horses that have been taught
to fight you. When I get a horse that wants to fight, I put him in a
stall and quiet him down. Then I stand beside him in the stall in the
safety zone and continue getting him used to me. If you stand alongside
the shoulder of a horse that wants to fight with you and grab a chunk of
mane right at his withers, you can stay alongside him quietly while he
backs up, spins, or goes up in front and he can’t hurt you. As soon as
he realizes that fighting isn’t the game you’re playing, he’ll
stop fighting you. This leads to the third thing I learned from Gydames.
Choose the game you want to play and don’t let the horse choose for
you. Nowadays, if I had someone with a nippy baby stallion, I would tell
them to put a dropped noseband on when they went to working him so he
couldn’t open his mouth and start the nipping game in the first place.
That way, corrections for nipping wouldn’t interrupt the rhythm of
whatever else that person was trying to do with the horse. Pretty soon
the whole nipping thing would just go away because a game isn’t any
fun unless you can get somebody else to play it with you. And then the
person could forget about the noseband.
Gydames was a really nice guy. Despite all my good training, he
turned out to be a fantastic halter horse and then he became a nice
cutting horse. He was a high-headed Arabian so his form wasn’t pretty
but he could hold cow with best of them. He liked that game much better
than fighting.
© 1997-2002 Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre.
All rights reserved.
Instructor and trainer
Ron Meredith has refined his "horse logical"
methods for communicating with equines for over 30 years as
president of
Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre,
an ACCET accredited equestrian educational institution.
Rt. 1 Box 66
Waverly, WV 26184
(800)679-2603
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