Monthly Archives: September 2009

OMG PONIES!1! I have two horses

I think this morning it really sank in that I have two horses. I, who wasted decades stuck in my belief that only Other People had (deserved?) horses. I, who bought a house in 2003 when I should have bought a horse instead. I. Have. Two. Horses.

Salsa is clearly an LBE, while Rocky is clearly a quadpolar mystery. He’s so evenly distributed in all the horsenality quadrants, and pretty mild to boot, that I still am not sure of his innate horsenality. I do my best to adapt to whatever horsenality he’s showing at the moment, but I’m looking forward to the horsenality report application that Parelli is working on so I can learn how to customize my responses to blend “horsenality of the moment” and “innate horsenality” strategies.

It really hit home for me this week how often I give my horses the wrong responsibilities. I protect my “herd of two” as often as possible, but I have also let Rocky touch noses with other horses, or lay his ears back at them, or even swing his butt toward a lower herd mate while I was haltering Rocky.

I’d been told before (pre-Parelli) “don’t let him do that!” whenever he reached out to another horse, but when I asked “why not?” the answer was “you have to show him who’s boss.” As most of these were people who “showed” their horses who was “boss” by jerking the reins, tying the horse’s mouth closed, or smacking them with sticks in a punishing way versus in a communicative way, I took the explanation to be another example of aggressive or micromanaging methods. I wanted to give Rocky some independence and a feeling like he could make some decisions on his own.

Parelli teaches us to “show him who’s boss” in an entirely different way. We have to act like a horse so that our horses elect us to be their bosses; we don’t impose bossness on them with “mechanics,” “fear,” or “intimidation.” The program gives the horse four responsibilities and the human four responsibilities, and you can trace everything to at least one of those items.

It is my responsibility to think like a horse and that means understanding my role as leader and acting accordingly, which is not the same as micromanagement.

Rocky swung his hindquarters toward Salsa (which put me between his butt and Salsa’s nose) when I had Salsa on-line and Rocky was tied on the high line, and I asked Erin: “Am I supposed to do something here?” and she said “Yes. There should be no dominance games when you are around. If there are, it means you are not the leader.”

So I gave Rocky a long phase 1 driving game and then right when I zipped through 2 and got to 3, his haunch ran into my rope! He pivoted around so fast I felt a breeze, and he lowered his head and gave me both eyes. Then Salsa twitched his ears back and though we haven’t played any game but Friendly yet, I gave him a good schwiegermutter look and he took a step back and gave me both eyes and ears.

I introduced Salsa to the carrot stick today and will start playing the games with him tomorrow, following the sequence the Savvy Times magazine recently laid out: games 1-3, on-line patterns level 1, games 4-7, on-line patterns level 2.

Categories: Leadership | 1 Comment

Rocky loves his new job, and Salsa digs it here

Rocky is now the surrogate mama for Centella, Erin’s new filly, as well as the gentle and wise herd leader for Salsa. I have video and some great snapshots showing Rocky’s look of contentment: he has a Purpose and it’s one that suits him very well.

I don’t want to post too many of Centella (“spark of light”) until we have a chance to announce her arrival on Erin’s blog, but here is one of Rocky teaching her how to play with a cone (which he brought all the way across the arena to show her!):

Salsa and Rocky do well together in the Back 40, but we can’t leave Salsa in there all the time, because we free-feed and he would probably gain 100 pounds and founder within the week.

Erin and I worked out a schedule this morning. Salsa will go back in his small pen for the daytime, where he can see everything that goes on and have several horses in his line of sight. In the evenings after the Back 40 horses finish all or most of their hay, I will turn him out with them for the night. In the mornings, Salsa can have his bucket on the high line with the others (once I teach or re-teach him how to tie well), and then Leslie will move him to his daytime room before she throws hay in the Back 40. Of course I will play with him as often as I can, and I will bring him into the arena when I play with Rocky. Hopefully this will be a good mix of mental, emotional, and physical stimulation for him.

This is a video still, so pardon the blur, but I thought it was cute. I set up my “mobile office” in the Back 40 to supervise dinner in case of drama, and Salsa immediately had to go check it out. You can’t see it in this snapshot but he turned his head right before snorting, and thus my laptop narrowly escaped a shower. Next time I’ll keep it in a sleeve until I’m actually working on it.

Categories: Love | Tags: , , , | Leave a comment

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