Big sheltered barn available and the horses choose to stand outside in the wind, I think they feel safer without all the rattling.
How are you all coping with storm 672 of this winter?
Lovely 2yo Splash learning to touch objects on a voice cue and building confidence in the environment 🥰
He has come such a long way from the uncatchable, nervous pony I first met, all down to his owner’s dedication and patience.
All achieved through helping him feel safe and building new, positive associations with people. Low-stress training.
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On this day last year I brought the boys back home to the north after 7 years of living down south and much searching for a suitable place❤️
I feel so fortunate that I can give them such a lovely life here and I get to hang out with them every single day ❤️
I’m sure nobody will get as much joy from this video as me 😅 but here’s a little compilation of their first year in their new home 🐴
Winter evening with the boys ❄️❄️
It’s so cold here that nothing really thawed out today.
I add lots of warm water to their feeds to help increase their water intake and given they’re both older boys with issues I do rug when it’s this cold and bitter. It’s going to snow/rain relentlessly from about 1am 🫠
They’re all prepared with lots of loose hay to munch that will keep them warm and their big, dry barn to shelter in.
Enjoy some frosty morning joy with Dan 🥰🥰
Live with Lucy Chester Horsemanship
Live with Lucy Chester Horsemanship
The joy of being allowed into a section of the winter field after a horrible few days 🎉❤️
Dan making his excitement everyone else’s problem 😅
Lovely to see the boys outside and playing together now we’re coming out of the storm, I think they both need to let off a bit of steam.
Playing involves bitey face game and then Lenny aggressively rubbing his head on Dan’s butt until Dan gets sick of him 😅❤️
Let’s hope the remaining wind dries the ground up a bit but I’m not hopeful 🥲☔️
I’ve been closing off the “summer” section of our track all year as soon as it gets wet enough to create mud to see if I can keep it in use all winter without it getting rutty. I opened it back up this morning after a couple of days of very wet weather.
While I appreciate we have had an unusually dry winter so far I’m hopeful it might actually hold up until spring. Even if it does get really wet, the great thing about not letting it get chewed up is I can safely open it on frozen ground without worrying about the horses getting injured on any ruts.
Just a little video showing how chewed up the area the horses are on is getting after 2 days of rain, the summer track starts at the hedge row. There is some old hardcore under the mud in the winter area so it doesn’t get too bad, but none under the summer track.
Appropriate Training and Expectations
with Yasmin Stuart
Vet phobias 🐴
I was asked to work with lovely Harvey as, after a period of intense treatment for cellulitis, he had become so dangerous with the vet to the level that they refused to come out to him anymore. He was striking out with his front legs, kicking and aggressively biting to the point I believe he caused injury to a vet when they tried to pin him into a corner. It was also impossible to administer oral sedation via syringe. Harvey’s owner was understandably upset that her horse was not only so fearful but also worried that she wouldn’t be able to get the necessary veterinary care that he might need going forwards.
When I met Harvey he was extremely suspicious of anyone except his owner going into his stable. We decided the most sensible goal was to teach him to accept a syringe orally so his owner could sedate him herself before the vet arrived and hopefully gently start to make it a less stressful experience for him.
I always use positive reinforcement to deal with fear-based issues, there is just no way stressing a horse out more by moving their feet or flooding them with stimulus is going to make them feel better emotionally about the situation, even if it gets compliance eventually. It can also get people hurt.
I stayed working in protected contact the whole time with him on the other side of the stable door, not only for my safety but for his comfort as well, having people in his space had become scary to him.
I started teaching him simple hand targeting which he picked up quickly and seemed to enjoy. I then tried to do the same thing just holding an empty syringe in my hand and he immediately disengaged and went back to his haynet despite me working with extremely high-value food rewards. I just waited for him to engage with me again and eventually he was confidently targeting the empty syringe with his nose. There is such a positive shift in the horse’s emotional state once they realise they are allowed to say no and leave.
The last thi
Behaviour and Management with Horse Weighbridge North East
Behaviour and Management with Horse Weighbridge North East