LS Horsemanship

LS Horsemanship Equine behavioural consultant. Kind, horse-centred training and support.
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When your hairdo is too much to be inside the fly mask šŸ˜ŽšŸ˜Ž
10/07/2025

When your hairdo is too much to be inside the fly mask šŸ˜ŽšŸ˜Ž

Your horse didn’t sign up for this 🐓My friend recently sent me an article that was basically just belittling anyone tryi...
05/07/2025

Your horse didn’t sign up for this 🐓

My friend recently sent me an article that was basically just belittling anyone trying to be more ethical with their horses, a running theme within the article was the idea that horses have entered into a ā€œmutually beneficialā€ contract with us at some point. Because we feed them they must work for us and if we do silly things like groundwork and don’t ride them we are doing them a terrible disservice because you absolutely cannot treat a horse like a pet and do ridiculous things like cuddle them and give them treats. They're there to work!

Well I must’ve missed the memo because my boys definitely didn’t sign anything.

You can’t call something an agreement when one party has no choice in the matter. Regardless of how kind or ethical we try to be with our horses the truth is, unless we are turning our horses out on acres and acres of land and essentially leaving them to be feral, we control every aspect of their lives. Where they live, where they go, what they eat, when they eat, who they live with. Very few horses get to opt out of being ridden or jumping or dressage or hacking or whatever else we decide to do with them.

It is not your horse’s responsibility to stay sound and be a good jumping horse just because a bunch of humans decided that was his designated job and you paid Ā£10k for him, and it is not fair to reduce his quality of life for your convenience. Unfortunately the industry is still full of people who think a horse’s life only has value if they can be ridden and some people seem to project this onto the rest of us who love our horses for who they are and not just what they can do for us.

When we understand the body and how taxing being ridden actually is for a horse, the idea that riding them is doing them some sort of favour becomes a bit ridiculous. It takes much patience, care and consideration to ride a horse in a way that isn’t detrimental to their body, they certainly aren’t designed to be ridden. I am so happy that people are taking steps to further their knowledge and try to become more ethical in their interactions with horses and I’m sick of people who are threatened by this trying to shame them out of it.

Feeling like our horse owes us something because we have spent x amount of money or given them what we deem to be the ā€œperfect lifeā€ just breeds frustration. No matter how much money or effort you have put in, your horse cannot understand this. He is just out there being a horse and responding to the world the only way he knows how to.

So next time you’ve spent hours caring for your horse, just paid off your last vets bill, he’s broken his 6th rug of the season and he just will not ā€œdo the thingā€ in your training session, remember he is oblivious to all of this. He is just doing the best he can with the information, experiences and body he has available to him. The more we can learn about equine behaviour and healthy movement, the more we can empathise and move through these issues without feeling so hard done by.

Training becomes much more pleasant for us and horses when we start seeing issues as interesting puzzles to solve rather than feeling frustrated at a lack of compliance and feeling a need to make the horse ā€œdo the thingā€.

And if you want to spend your time taking your horse for walks like a dog or teaching them to jump through hoops because that is what brings you joy then more power to you. Do not let other people’s nonsense justification for the way they treat their horses make you doubt yourself for a second. Friends, forage, freedom to move, freedom from pain and feeling safe, none of this requires you to sit on their back. 🐓

04/07/2025

Summer coughs 🐓

Bit of a different post from me but if my experiences can help someone then I’d love that.

The video is from a year ago. He is fine now.

Out of the blue I think 4 years ago Dan developed a nasty, allergic-type cough one spring. He’d never done it before and he’d been at that yard for years previously with no breathing issues. We tried the usual medication stuff and found success with a tonic from Trinity Consultants called AH181, he stopped coughing completely and everything was good.

The second year it happened again and the AH181 didn’t touch it, we went through a few bespoke tonics from Trinity (thanks Simon for being amazing!) and finally found something strong enough to stop him coughing in Z70.

He’s always lived out and never coughs in the winter despite being on dry hay.

Fast forward to last year I moved the horses 200 miles up north in January, in April he started with an awful coughing fit which resulted in an emergency vet visit as I felt he just couldn’t stop.
His lungs always sounded pretty clear it was just this horrendous cough.

Despite being on the Z70 He would go through a period of about 5 days when it would be minor then he’d have another really bad coughing fit. I decided to have an endoscopy to make sure nothing sinister was going on because sometimes he would cough so hard it sounded like he was choking. The scope was all normal and clear aside from a bit of mucus which was a relief.

The general consensus was this was an asthmatic type allergy and it would likely get worse each summer which is why the things that helped him previously weren’t enough.

We muddled through the rest of the year and he was back to being fine again in the autumn. Me being me I couldn’t leave things alone and came across some information about KPU, Dan does fit a lot of the symptoms so I decided to lightly follow some of the protocols because it couldn’t hurt. This meant not feeding haylage/wrapped hay, cutting out chaff and feeding various herbs. (There is much more to KPU than this but I remain on the fence and confused so just wanted to try the easy changes to see if it helped). My horses were already on very minimal grass and fed ad-lib meadow hay so I didn’t need to make any changes there.

Now I’m absolutely not saying that has anything to do with the fact that this year he is not coughing AT ALL, but it’s really peaked my curiosity. He is in the same place, he is on quite dusty hay (which I do rinse down for literally 5 seconds with the hose but not enough to do anything significant) and I started him on the Z70 back in March rather than waiting for him to start coughing, which could’ve been a big factor.

But here we are in July and my horse still hasn’t coughed for the first summer in 3 years and I am so relieved. Long may it last, anyone with a coughing horse knows the anxiety when you hear them start 😩.

I think, just like in humans, gut health has a huge amount to answer for and I’m excited at the new research being done around this for horses. Wouldn’t it be amazing if some of the ailments we thought were degenerative and incurable could actually be improved through improving the gut?

Would love to hear of anyone’s experiences.

Searching on behalf of a very good client and friend of mine in Teesside/North Yorkshire.Looking for land/field/yard to ...
30/06/2025

Searching on behalf of a very good client and friend of mine in Teesside/North Yorkshire.

Looking for land/field/yard to rent for private use, 2/3/4 acres would be ideal. Very self sufficient and can provide excellent references from previous landlords. Always pays on time and takes extremely good care of the horses.

Horses very respectful of fencing, would need to be able to put own temporary field shelter up if no shelter already in place.

Also open to renting space within a yard, horses must live out 24/7 all year round so traditional livery with stabling not an option. Would be open to an equi-central/track setup shared with someone else but these seem to not exist in the area.

Open to all options please PM me if you have anything at all that might work in the areas below.

Just feeling sentimental and found these photos of Lenny, the first one when we first met, second one when he came home ...
29/06/2025

Just feeling sentimental and found these photos of Lenny, the first one when we first met, second one when he came home to me at 6 months old and the third one a few weeks ago at 20 years old 🄰🄰

I can’t believe 20 years has passed and he has been a constant in my life for longer than he hasn’t. What a privilege to be able to share so many years together, we’ve definitely been through some stuff but I am so glad I can give him the life he has now even if he had to tolerate my mistakes in the past.

Have any of you had your horse since they were a foal? I’d love to see then and now photos ā¤ļø

We need to change things 🐓I read an anonymous post this morning from someone who was understandably really upset after t...
27/06/2025

We need to change things 🐓

I read an anonymous post this morning from someone who was understandably really upset after their vet had ā€œslapped around the head, shouted, swore and kickedā€ their horse who was ā€œplaying upā€ while they were trying to sedate him. The post received hundreds of comments and while plenty were calling it out for the cruelty it is, there were also plenty of comments justifying the behaviour or seeing it as ā€œnot that badā€. This is so disappointing.

Many of these comments kept referring to the horse’s ā€œbad mannersā€ and him ā€œbeing rudeā€. Horses who are reactive around veterinary procedures are scared and often even traumatised. The fact that so many people are so conditioned to think of horses as either compliant and good, or non-compliant and bad without any consideration that this is a thinking, feeling sentient being with their own life experiences is really disheartening.

Can you imagine the outrage if someone said their dog’s vet had slapped them around the head when they were frightened?

Yes horses are large animals that could potentially injure you, but any professional working with horses, especially vets who are expected to promote the very best welfare practices, should have a much better understanding of behaviour and should never be punishing an animal. Not only does further frightening or hurting a scared horse not work, it makes them even worse the next time.

This is not an anti-vet post, it is a call to demand better. With so much research now available around the effectiveness of using co-operative care and positive reinforcement for horses who struggle with veterinary visits, why aren’t all vets being given this information as part of their continued development? And if they are why are they not implementing it or referring their clients to behaviourists where appropriate?

There is a power dynamic between a vet and a client that can make it really uncomfortable to question them in the moment. I had an incident several years ago where my horse had an abscess and was in a lot of pain. The vet had just explained to me how much pain he was in, then proceeded to call him ā€œrudeā€ and ā€œnaughtyā€ when he tried to sn**ch his leg away when she was attempting to dig it out. I had to really firmly insist on her sedating him as she kept fighting with my horse as he became really upset and panicked. She had just told me herself he was in a lot of pain, so why did she then say he was rude?

This isn’t an attack on that vet, I think she’s a kind person who loves animals, but I also think she’s been indoctrinated into a system that is not following the behavioural science we have. I really want this to change.

A horse who starts barging you around when you try to inject him isn’t rude he is scared.
A horse who bites and threatens to kick when you pin him in the corner while he is in pain isn’t nasty he is scared.
A horse who pulls away and desperately tries to leave when the vet turns up doesn’t ā€œneed manners putting into himā€ he is scared.

Sometimes yes in emergencies we have to get stuff done, but most of the time it is not an emergency, and even then there are so many options on the table to make things easier on the horse and safer for everyone involved. None of those options include slapping, punching or kicking horses.

Do any of your vet practices promote co-operative care or positive reinforcement? I’d love it if you could share them in the comments. 🐓

Mounting issues 🐓Most mounting issues are not training issues.If we think about it logically, presumably the horse prese...
26/06/2025

Mounting issues 🐓

Most mounting issues are not training issues.

If we think about it logically, presumably the horse presenting mounting issues has been ridden before. He is aware of what the mounting block means and what happens next. He is not confused or misunderstanding, he is communicating clearly that he doesn’t want you to get on. If we care about our horse’s wellbeing it is up to us to figure out why that is.

Most of the time the answer is either pain/discomfort or negative associations with being ridden, often both. So until we address those things, our horse is not going to feel good about being mounted, even if we can get them to give up and comply.

Client story shared with permission. I have been working with a lovely client, who I’ll call Lisa, for the last few months who initially contacted me about mounting issues. She was very conscientious and had been to the vet who declared the horse sound, had the tack checked and had regular appointments with a bodyworker who raised no concerns about this horse being ridden. Her horse Barney would become anxious when presented at the block, shifting backwards or swinging his quarters out sideways.

Lisa booked a session with a recommended ā€œbehavioural trainerā€ who’s opinion was that he just needed to learn to trust the rider and build confidence. They spent time making Barney disengage his quarters and back up, they then spent time tapping him on the side with a stick until he lined up with the mounting block. Barney become extremely stressed and started trying to pull away but they persisted until eventually he stood still and allowed them to mount. The trainer explained this as Barney feeling more relaxed and building confidence. Lisa showed me the ā€œafterā€ video and Barney was stood still heavily resting a back leg with very prominent triangle-shaped upper eyelids. He barely reacted as the rider got on. To me this horse was still extremely anxious and had shut down. They had achieved compliance but Barney still felt really unhappy and stressed.

Lisa found she was back at square one with Barney within a week and reached out to me. Upon meeting Barney we discussed the signs of stress in the videos and I also explained that, in my opinion, it was inappropriate to be trying to ride Barney with his current musculature. He had very little muscle over his back and a sunken neck. I had strong reasons to suspect Barney was experiencing pain given how he was presenting and referred on to a recommended physio and subsequently a different vet. Barney was found to have issues in his spine and neck which we are now very carefully rehabbing from the ground with appropriate supportive treatment.

I see so many horses being pushed into shut down like this, if we can learn about behaviour ourselves we can recognise when this is happening and advocate for our horses, no matter who the professional is. I wish I could share the video of him shutting down with you as an educational tool but it doesn’t feel right to.

Please understand that any training method that makes it uncomfortable for a horse to not line up at the mounting block and only takes the pressure off when they stand still, whether that be whip taps or flags or spinning ropes, can easily coerce a horse who is in pain into compliance.

I meet so many horses who have been seen by numerous professionals who haven’t flagged what, to me, are really obvious signs of discomfort and weakness. The industry has normalised stressed, dysfunctional horses so much that it feels like we can’t see the wood for the trees. We need to hold professionals to higher standards and by educating ourselves we can absolutely do that and make better choices for our horses.

Please don’t wait for your horse to be shouting before you listen, happy to support anyone who wants to message me if you’re concerned about your horse, I’ll hopefully be able to nudge you in the right direction to someone who can help you.

ā€œWhen the only tool you have is a hammer everything starts to look like a nailā€ 🐓I love this quote and it applies so wel...
23/06/2025

ā€œWhen the only tool you have is a hammer everything starts to look like a nailā€ 🐓

I love this quote and it applies so well to horse training. With people becoming so much more educated on equine behaviour and much more interested in doing things ethically, there is a pushback from many who are perhaps feeling threatened and uncomfortable that the way they’ve been training for decades is being questioned. I understand that, its human to feel defensive, I’ve felt the same in the past, but its not an excuse to continue treating horses like this.

Boundaries has become a buzzword used to justify harsh treatment as necessary. There is talk of boundaries and safety, trying to scare/patronise people who want to be kind to their horses. Making it sound as if you don’t scare your horse with a flag every time he comes an inch too close to you he’s going to head out into the village and devour all of the local children.

I’ll try to give an insight into how I look at things now. Lets say we have a horse who is barging into their owner, dragging them all over the place, maybe setting their neck and tanking off. Previously my first thought would be to put on a pressure halter and do lots of groundwork until the horse learns ā€œrespectā€. Instead now my first thoughts are what is contributing to the chronic stress in this horse’s life and how can we change that?

🐓 How is their management, is it species-appropriate? Do they get enough turnout/socialisation/forage?
🐓 How is their health/are there any indications of pain/discomfort (usually yes)?
🐓 What are their past experiences with training/people? Are there negative associations there (always yes)?

From here we will discuss and make changes and set the horse up to succeed so we don’t have to put ourselves in a situation where we’re battling with the horse.

This idea that adding high-pressure to a stressed horse and battling through with them until they comply is making them feel better is so mis-leading. Sure you can quite quickly get a horse under control but the notion that you’re making them feel safe with you by scaring them and pushing them around is a fantasy, you’re shutting them down.

I had a horse at one of my obstacle clinics recently who came in really stressed, he was barging and dragging his owner around and wasn’t responding to any pressure. At their request I took over for a few minutes to demonstrate how I wanted them to train with him. I took him to a place where he seemed to feel safest and just stood with him on a loose lead rope and fed him a few handfuls of meadow nuts. If he’d tried to turn around and leave to the gate I would’ve let him and gone with him. He didn’t. After a minute I taught him really basic hand targeting for a food reward. I then started taking a step and seeing if he’d come with me, he did. Within 5 minutes he was learning to approach the first obstacle, at no point did I use pressure on the lead rope, at no point did he barge into me or pull me.

He wasn’t barging because he was disrespectful and had no ā€œboundariesā€, he was barging because he was extremely stressed and scared and in a situation he couldn’t cope with. Just pausing and saying ā€œhey lets just chill here and eat some meadow nuts, I’m not going to make you stay hereā€ brought his stress down enough that he stopped trying to leave and could actually process what we were asking him to do. He started to see me as a place of safety, someone who was listening to him and someone who could help him feel better, rather than someone to get away from and fight against. Now I am not saying it is this simple at all for every horse, but it was for this horse and I hate that in another situation they’d have been encouraged to push him hard and move his feet to get him to comply.

Does pushing horses around with high-pressure get compliance? Yes. But lets not pretend this is ethical or ā€œfor the horseā€. I’m not interested in compliance, I’m interested in safety for the horse and the humans. Stressed horses are the least safe to be around.

I know the way I look at horses now is very different to the industry- norm and that it can be hard to understand a concept that is so alien to how we’ve been conditioned to behave around horses. I can almost see people visibly recoil when I suggest allowing the horse to say no, or going with the horse when they choose to back away from something. We’ve been so conditioned that if we let the horse have any say we are going to create a dangerous monster.

I have boundaries with my horses and it looks nothing like causing them high-stress and scaring/threatening them with flags/ropes/sticks. It looks like making sure their needs are met so they are able to cope with the pressures and challenges of living in our human world. It also looks like not setting them up to fail by putting them in situations they aren’t equipped to cope with yet. They can cope with pressure just fine and they are safe for anyone to handle and be around.

I have so many more thoughts on this topic and I know it is derisive, but I am becoming more and more disillusioned with the industry and I just want to put a voice out there for the horses and for the people who are feeling conflicted due to the shaming and patronising tone that is being directed towards those of us who want to treat our horses more ethically. Horses are gentle animals and we need to change the narrative around how we treat and perceive them.

Are we talking about boundaries or are we talking about horses complying with everything we ask without question no matter the circumstances? 🐓

Pictured is my positive-reinforcement trained horse, with apparently no "boundaries" because I let him have autonomy as much as possible, playing a game I like to call Yeet the carrotā„¢ before his evening shift devouring the locals.

Great clinic at Bottom Farm today, we prepped for a heatwave and ended up dealing with blustery winds instead 🄲Lots of l...
22/06/2025

Great clinic at Bottom Farm today, we prepped for a heatwave and ended up dealing with blustery winds instead 🄲

Lots of learning about reading behaviour and using positive reinforcement to build confidence in small steps. (Sorry I missed the first group for photos)

I still have some weekend availability left for July/August. šŸ˜Ž

What does a stressed horse look like? 🐓I think most people would be confident in identifying a horse who is so stressed ...
21/06/2025

What does a stressed horse look like? 🐓

I think most people would be confident in identifying a horse who is so stressed they have gone into a fight/flight response. Bolting, spooking, broncing, rearing, snorting etc, very loud behaviours. But what about beyond that?

When a horse becomes stressed and fight/flight behaviour doesn’t work to get them out of the situation, where does that stress go? We need to be careful that when we think we’re achieving relaxation, we’re not actually pushing a horse into a shut down state. They can look outwardly calm but they are in fact still feeling stressed about the situation, they’ve just learned there is no way out.

A really common misconception I hear is horses who won’t load, they just plant at the bottom of the ramp and will not be moved. People will say ā€œhe’s clearly not scared, he’s just stubborn, look he’s going to sleepā€. If a horse stands unmovable, closing his eyes while someone hauls on his face and someone else chases him from behind, believe me he is scared and he is desperately trying to cope with a situation he has learned is inescapable.

Sometimes horses who don’t outwardly express their stress through loud behaviours can be struggling more. I used to help my friend care for her extremely quiet, laid back cob on a livery yard. They ended up not being allowed out of their stables for 2 weeks straight one winter, and while many horses were exploding and box walking, he would just stand quietly at the back of his box and make no fuss. Around this time he started to be a little bit shifty at the mounting block, it turned out he had developed severe stomach ulcers from the stress of being in. I think of this often when I see quiet horses.

When we are training we really need to consider the horse’s emotional wellbeing throughout the process, not just what the end result looks like to us. Only with context are we able to tell if our horse is truly okay with something or if they have perhaps shut down a little to cope when we wouldn't take no for an answer. There is a whole spectrum of stress and behaviour, it is not just a case of a shut down horse is shut down about everything, or that an anxious horse always has to feel anxious.

Many horses are living with a high level of chronic stress in their daily lives that affects them not just emotionally but can hugely impact on their physical wellbeing too. Sometimes a large part of the answer to our issues is not where we’re looking. If we can reduce the level of stress our horses may be experiencing overall, we can see improvements in areas we perhaps wouldn’t think are linked.

If we want to have a genuinely good relationship with our horses we need to look more closely and have higher standards for our training beyond whether it gets the horse to comply or not.

Pictured is me riding Dan "tackless" many years ago, logically you'd think tackless horses would simply leave if they didn't want to do it or felt stressed, but he had been conditioned that if he veered off course I would touch him with the stick to correct him, which he found unpleasant and threatening despite me never actually hitting him with it, "just" tapping and irritating him with it. You can see the tension above his eye, his ear locked onto the stick and his tight muzzle. I don't choose to train like this anymore as I don't want my cues to actually be threats of escalation, that doesn't feel like a partnership to me and created negative associations with training for Dan that I was unaware of.

It is uncomfortable to look deeper, but if you really value your horse and their wellbeing above all else we have to be better and really think about how are horse is experiencing things. 🐓

Been a bit quiet on here as I just haven’t had the time. We are all melting in the sun and having the perpetual struggle...
21/06/2025

Been a bit quiet on here as I just haven’t had the time. We are all melting in the sun and having the perpetual struggle of fly rugs on and too hot or cooler but eaten alive by horseflies 🄲. Roll on the thunderstorms later!

We’re currently having big sloppy feeds, extra salt and hosing down thoroughly twice daily (which is extra fun when you’re changing and drying hoof boots alongside)

How is everyone coping with the heat? Lenny’s side eye lets you know his thoughts šŸ˜…ā¤ļø

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