Friday, 30 July 2010

A bit of a scuffle

BG has needed to be encouraged down for her feeds but she has been good to catch once in her field shelter again for which I am grateful. Even one day when there was a bike leading against the shelter, the other owners around moving things and topping up water buckets next to us she was very good and had her head collar on. So I am relieved, although still not going to feel totally relaxed until Monday’s farrier meeting is over.

The farrier is due late morning, so a time I normally don’t catch BG. I am wondering whether to shut her in her field shelter for the morning so at least I know I will be able to get her. I haven’t ever done this before a farrier visit so I am umm-ing and arrr-ing over it. Oh for a pony that is a dream to catch. I will be working on catching her in the field again once Monday is over.

BG and P1 had a fight last night. I haven’t seen them do that for a while, they’ve been quite content with each other but last night they decided to kick off, showing each other their back legs in the air. Horses do fight, it is natural, and so long as they don’t do it in anger or viciously I don’t think there is a lot you can do about it. We do tell them off but that only has so much effect. P1 looked like he came away without a scratch but BG has had the skin broken in three places on her off-hind. It bled a bit but she luckily didn’t seem to be feeling it, and didn’t look stiff at all last night or this morning. It looked like it stayed quite clean over night too so hopefully it will clear up quickly.

Wednesday, 28 July 2010

Tentatively breathing a sigh of relief

Tuesday morning – head collar on first time
Tuesday evening – head collar on first time
Wednesday morning – nose into head collar, BG pulled back so I quickly put the lead rope across the entrance so she couldn’t escape and tried again – perfect.

I’m not sure how long to leave it before I attempt to get her in the field again, but with the farrier due soon I don’t want to do anything to jeopardise the small improvement we have made so far. BG needs to get her confidence up a little more.

I’m also relieved we have had a decent amount of rain that has softened the ground just a little. With this heat it is sure to dry out quickly though.

Lastly, a thank you to P1. A sheep from the next field had got through in the with ponies and was a little upset not being able to get back to its Mum. P1 looked intrigued as we tried herding him (the sheep) along the fence line to where we had opened the gate, and was actually a help getting the little sheep back home. P1 did duck under the lead rope on the field shelter entrance to check BG had finished her breakfast afterwards though. He seems to like being in the shelter, I think for the shade and a bit of peace from the flies. The other day he and P2 were in there together resting which was quite sweet. BG took a look but decided there wasn’t enough room for her too.

Monday, 26 July 2010

Slowly slowly

I don't write on here every day but want to do more regular updates now BG and I have a problem to overcome, so in future when she reverts again I can look back and see how quickly (or slowly) she overcame it. Also, any heart ache we had to go through, so I know there is hope no matter how hard it may seem at the time.

BG came in quite happily this morning, put her nose all the way in the head collar before pulling back and then turning away. We didn't have much time since we were on our way to work, so we quite quickly moved to the 'hold hoof, lead rope round neck, head collar on' method. She knew as soon as I touched her with the leap rope what was coming, and allowed us to do it all with hardly any protest. She certainly didn't get upset by us using that method for which I am very grateful. If she did get upset I would have to come up with something else and I think I am all out of ideas.

P1 didn't help matters this morning. He charged in to eat BG's breakfast, rubbed his neck on her shelter entrance which upsets BG when she is inside, and then went to snap at her when I lead her out. Again, I dropped the head collar on and off her nose before letting her go.

This evening BG came in happily, but saw the head collar and didn't even attempt to put her nose into it before turning away. I asked my husband to give me a hand and lifted her hoof up. He said I should try again but I said she wouldn't let me try again so soon after. Sometimes my husband is right though, second time lucky she was as good as gold and didn't even flinch when the head collar went on her nose.

I did a little bit in hand with her tonight, and led her over some poles too. I even lead her over a small jump. She saw it and you could see her brain processing it and thinking of the stride she needed to be on and she put in a beautiful effort.

Lets hope tomorrow the head collar goes on even more easily and we can be back on track (not catching in the field again, just the head collar on every time in her shelter again would be a start) by the end of the week.

Sunday, 25 July 2010

No real improvement


So this morning I went up hoping BG would have forgotten about everything and have her head collar on in her shelter with no issues. Another part of me was thinking expect a fight.

So BG came down to her shelter as good as gold, but would she have the head collar on - no! One look at it and her hind quarters swung round. It is really weird, she will let you make more of a fuss up around her head than usual, but turns away at the slightest sight of the head collar.

I tried the patience approach, I tried the ignoring her and leaving her to it for a bit approach. Eventually, as she was letting me stoke her without an issue I used a lead rein to rub her over her shoulder and up round her neck. She hadn't seen me pick it up but I was expecting a protest as I looped it over her neck, she was as good as gold though. Then my husband held the rope whilst I put her head collar on. Perfect. She didn't pull back when she saw it, her ears didn't go back when the nose part went on. It makes you wonder what all the fuss was about originally.

Since the head collar was on we finally got to give her her breakfast, then let her eat it in peace whilst I topped up the water buckets. Next thing we know P1 was in there eating it instead of BG!

Tonight we used BG's food bowl to tempt her down to her shelter. In she went good as gold. Headed over the her food bowl, putting her nose straight in her head collar....then a car door slammed and she spun round and out the shelter. We got her back in but would she let us anywhere near her whilst we had her head collar on us - no.

In the early days with her last owner she had once had to the have the farrier hold her hoof whilst her owner put her head collar on. I always thought I would never do this as I could imagine her getting very upset and trying to pull away, I also thought it could be quite dangerous. Tonight though the head collar wasn't working, she wouldn't let me get near her with the leap rope. So I showed my husband how to hold her hoof and I put the lead rope round her neck. We took it slowly, and she never tried to pull away or get upset so I don't think it was such a bad method.

My husband then tried holding her by the lead rope whilst I went to get the head collar. This time she did get upset and spun round so that my husband couldn't hold her. We got her back, calmed her down and the I held her whilst he approached her with the head collar. She wasn't as good as this morning, she was still very wary of it, but we got it on without any real upset, even with something banging the side of the shelter just as the nose part went on.

I lunged her once she'd had her tea, then took her back to her shelter before letting her go, to slip the head collar on and off her nose to try and show her it wasn't scary.

Tomorrow morning could be interesting, she might well be going without her breakfast as I can't spend hours up there, I'll need to get to work.

Saturday, 24 July 2010

And it all goes wrong

Not last night. Last night BG was perfect. I caught her, she had her tea and usual checks etc. and then I lunged her. She moved nicely on her bad rein, she is up to twenty minutes of lunging now, I was just doing ten or fifteen minutes when I was first getting her back into it. The line on her side, must be the bottom of her rib cage, is now visible in trot again so she must be dropping a bit of weight.

We put out a pole which BG wasn't too keen on the look of originally, since she had seen it being carried out. Once I got her going over it happily we put a tyre under the outside end to lift it up, she moved beautifully. She really picked her trot up over it. I could see where the saying poetry in motion comes from. I had such a big smile on my face last night. She'd also let me take her head collar off and put the new one on with no issues.

Then came this morning. BG saw us arrive and started to make her way down for her breakfast. I went to meet her half way carrying both the head collar and lead rope, which I had done the other night with no issues. Her nose went in the head collar just as the lead rope catch chinked against my boot. BG flew backwards, taking the head collar part of the way with her before it feel off, and she trotted back up the field to join P1 and P2.

I feel so guilty, she was coming down as good as gold and I spoilt it by letting the lead rope catch chink. Still, I didn't think it would cause as much of an issue as it did. We couldn't catch her, and had an appointment to make, so she went without her breakfast and we went back up after our appointment.

She still didn't like the look of the head collar in the field, but in trying to catch her I herded her into her field shelter. Even when in there it took half an hour to get the head collar on her.

Tonight was similar. Couldn't get it on her in the field, she did poke her nose towards it a couple of times, then turn and walk away. Eventually I got her herded down to the field shelter, but in there she wasn't having any of it. Whenever she caught sight of it she would swing her hind legs round to face me. A couple of times she edged her nose towards it, then her ears pinned back and she'd swing round.

So what do you do in this situation? Turn her away without her tea, but then she won't see the benefit of coming to us and into her shelter. Give her her tea and then she will learn she can have it without having had her head collar on.

The strange thing was she let me put fly repellent on her, even up round her ears which she doesn't normally like, with no problems, it was just the head collar she had a problem with.

My husband said he is sure she is just being stubborn because she is in season (we took her for a walk along the lanes in the morning and she was squirting on the way home). I always knew she would revert at some point rather than keep being a dream to catch, but I am very annoyed that I created the issue by letting the lead rope chink.

Still, a fortnight of being able to catch her isn't bad, and I have a video of catching her one night so I know it wasn't a dream and I have something to work towards again. Typical she is being a pain now I have the farrier booked in though.

Friday, 23 July 2010

Rain!

I was so glad to see some rain yesterday. It cooled the air, kept some of the flies away, softened the ground, got some moisture on BG’s hooves and will hopefully help the grass to grow.

Our field has not really recovered from winter. The farrier described it as a desert. The vet, after sedating BG, said she shouldn’t eat for half an hour, then took one look at our grazing and said that I’d probably be fine to turn her out in our field though. The ponies are all doing quite well on it though, I need to get some weight off BG and P2’s owner said he needs to loose some too. The only one doing okay is P1 who is exercised the most but never seems to have to worry about his weight.

I would love to fence off a section of the field to let it recover. We have tried this in the past but it doesn’t work. P1 has a fantastic jump on him, and he will always get into the section of the field that is fenced off. Normally he jumps cleanly, but sometimes he will bring some of the fence down, and then they all get through and the fencing needs sorting out. P2 also walks under the fence and it doesn’t seem to make any difference if it is electrocuted or not. I am very lucky, BG behaves herself and stays where she should be, but that doesn’t help much when she is in with the other two.

BG was stood by the gate as we arrived last night, with P1 and his owners. I thought I would catch BG straight away but she took one look at me as if to say ‘you haven’t had time to make my tea yet why would I want to be caught’, and then turned her back and trotted up the field to scare P2 away. I followed thinking ‘oh no, this will be a forty minute job to catch her tonight’, but she stood there, stepping back a little bit a couple of times, and let me catch her.

She had an easy night of it. Once I had sorted her out and picked out her hooves (first time I have had to do that for a while, the ground is so dry they have been clean for weeks) I just did a little bit of in-hand with her, leading her over some poles.

Thursday, 22 July 2010

A little down

I have been lunging BG most nights recently (although she does have at least one day off a week) but felt I needed to do something else with her so she didn’t get bored. It was a long time since I put the saddle on her so I thought I would take that up.

BG was in a very amenable mood. I put the head collar on in the field, once P1 had stopped shunting her round with his head and given us a bit of space, and she walked down to her shelter as good as gold beside me without me leading her. She ate her tea, I checked her over, gave her a quick brush and a little bit of fly repellent in the main places. Then I put on her new head collar (she still won’t have it on first, I have to put the old one on then the new one over the top and remove the old one) and coiled up her lunge line. She goes through phases of seeing me doing this (the lunge line) and hiding in the back of her shelter, or not being fussed at all by it.

I tied her up to saddle her and she wasn’t overly happy to see the saddle but let me put it on without too many issues. I went to lead her out and was very impressed as she moved all the way to the door before planting herself. So my husband led her and I went and stood in the shelter with the lunge whip. I don’t have to use it, just stand there with it and she moves out the door as quick as she can.

We walked her round with her saddle on. She walked wonky, still looking over her right-shoulder to where one slipped over in the past and swinging her hind quarters round to turn towards home.

I watched her walking along, it makes me wonder if it is hurting her, if the girth is too tight and pinching, but then I have had her relaxing with the saddle on, and even bending to lunge with it on in the past, so I don’t think it is the saddle. I checked the girth and I don’t think it was that either. I guess she is still scared of it potentially slipping off, and we just need to persevere. She got a fly on her belly that she was trying to shudder off, and that scared her when she did that and felt the saddle on her so we used that point to call it a day, with just a couple of final leading her in, and straight out, of her field shelter.

I thought she might run off once we let her go to escape us and the scary saddle. She stood with her head resting on the gate where P1 and P2 had left to go on a hack, and let me make a fuss of her, so she can’t hold it against me too much. Plus, she was perfect to catch this morning too, so hopefully it hasn’t damaged her trust in me. We’ll see what she is like tonight. It does make me feel sad that she still hasn’t got used to the saddle though.

I will have the saddle fitter out again to check the fit, but I need to get BG at least a bit happier under the saddle first or there will be nothing for the fitter to see and BG might attempt the run them down like last time if she gets upset.