I commend the owners for asking for help and not giving up so easily. With a bit of retraining, I bet she’ll be a willing partner, although she’ll probably need consistency and reprimanding with any negative actions. Thank you for sharing. 💖💕
@francesn339 ай бұрын
Did not take her long to realize she is not boss. I just enjoy how you take the anger or emotion out of your correction. Just consistency.
@CassieFick9 ай бұрын
Agreed 110%!!
@caobita9 ай бұрын
🖒
@CassieFick8 ай бұрын
Orthopedic surgeons hurt people all the time without being angry. Grinding her into meat for out of country consumption which is what her outcome will be if she is sent to loose horse sale and bought up by a kill buyer. Tim was loving. Sometimes loving does cause discomfort
@francesn338 ай бұрын
@judithmiller6670 I am not seeing this horse hurt. He makes sure the bit it in its bars and not teeth. Have you watched very long? He bumps this horse. Watch what he does and not the reaction. Play it over. He is one of the most transparent trainers on KZbin. Also, his corrections aren't fed by any emotion. He corrects enough to make an impression and never more. I trained my first horse at 15. I wish I had this emotional maturity. I failed at correction often. Tim does not.
@MalindaRyan-xi7et8 ай бұрын
@@francesn33 Such an accurate interpretation! Thank you for watching and commenting!
@octoberjubilee98669 ай бұрын
Loved how she reconsidered when you dropped the mounting block around the 3:10 mark but then onto the next strategy, not paying attention. By the videos end, Cupcake's attitude is much improved and since you've first started working with her, she's moving so much better in the hind. Can't wait to see her finished product!
@jackien55639 ай бұрын
A bit of discomfort is better than dead. You are indeed saving her life. I'm glad her owners recognized they needed help and reached out. That mare is lucky they care enough about her to try to solve the problem.
@MalindaRyan-xi7et8 ай бұрын
Absolutely!
@zoerolandevanrumt77453 ай бұрын
Better then dead? She would be better off changing owners these owner send her to an abuser! And havd no clue about horses by the looks of it neither do you!all these people that think he is a trainer,are all animal haters,abusers,and just people with no brain! He should be told off for the terrible fisical abuse i keep on seeing him doing to horses! Horses are not our slaves!they are not here to serve us
@donnac.16099 ай бұрын
Disciplining a broke horse at the right time is definitely not abuse. Glad you are helping tge owners with Cupcake. First time owners can get upside down with a horse, even a well trained one real quick. You will be able to guide them thru the steps and hopefully they will be able to pickup on reading their mares behavior from the ground and in the saddle. It will also help them with the young one......they are on a journey....but in the right direction!
@mariem46149 ай бұрын
Once they learn they can boss you around and they feel like the boss it can be scary. It is the little things we let go or ignore that turn into big things. This will make the horse better and give the owners the knowledge to deal with this girl effectively. Thanks for sharing a video that shows how to be firm but fair for a safe respectful horse
@MalindaRyan-xi7et8 ай бұрын
So true! Thanks for watching and commenting!
@MonikaNeumann-lt8qk9 ай бұрын
She acts as every single Haflinger we have here in the north of Germany. Pretty good horses as long as you are very straight with them. And very dangerous if you try the I love my pony way.
@crystalswanson5450Ай бұрын
Purchased haflinger few months ago after she rode perfectly on trail ride. Got her home she was a pushy nightmare on the ground and in the saddle she bucked, bolted, spooked and was anything but pleasant to ride. She was in her late teens but not settled but very smart. Farrier had a hard time with back feet had to use a war bridle. The final straw vet came over to give vaccinations and the mare body slammed her against the stall wall although she was not hurt. Vet said return her and I did. Owners took her back and sent me video of her behaving nicely on trail ride. I won’t ever own a haflinger again and thankful she didn’t hurt anyone. This mares initial behavior in video exactly like mine. Good job straightening her out
@catherinebryant19529 ай бұрын
i have seen this scenario before and the mare is in a different mellow state when she is pregnant, than when they aren't in foal they are a whole different horse
@Kharris921309 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@emilyspalding29827 ай бұрын
I have an Australian shepherd & have learned a lot about how to deal with her undesirable behaviors from watching your videos. Thank you for explaining the 'why' of you being so hard on this horse & also pointing out that you are going to be just as nice as you are demanding. It's all about balance.
@caobita9 ай бұрын
It's so important to let a horse know that it won't get away with bad behaviour. When Cupcake realised that all her tricks wouldn't work and she would get into trouble any time she tried, I could see that expression on her face like she was thinking "F*ck!" 😂 Great video to show to people who aren't aware of how essential being strict but fair is and also how well "wrong decision hard,right decision easy" works, not only with horses and children, but also with dogs. Thanks for sharing. I have a friend who should watch this, especially as you were referring to children 😉
@MalindaRyan-xi7et8 ай бұрын
I love your comment!! Sounds spot-on;)
@caobita8 ай бұрын
@@MalindaRyan-xi7et thank you Malinda. And my friend is happy that I shared the video with him. He said he'll watch more of your and Tim's videos 😊
@TheLisaHansonАй бұрын
I’m trying to watch every video you have on pushy behavior … this is our 3rd horse but I still feel Like a new owner/ we have a Horse that seemed very sweet. He’s unbelievably confident, but that’s not a good thing. It’s because he just doesn’t care about anybody else lol but he does a lot of these behaviors in the videos and I thought maybe he was hurting but now I realize he’s just trying to push us around. I have worked with him. I haven’t let him get away with things, but he definitely continues to push in every area and he does so many of the things that you’ve shown in these different videos of pushy horses thank you for these. I’m praying I’ll be able to solve his issues so it doesn’t get worse
@sourboi437618 күн бұрын
Please don't take advice from him, horses can be pushy but this man is training with negative reinforcements. Positive reinforcements and holding your ground sterly can coexist. This horse should have had enough retraining in ground work to stand still before he swung his other leg around.
@annieoakslee8 ай бұрын
When my horse had her foal she wouldnt let us ride her anymore...had my vet check her and he said from pushing so hard during labor she put her body out of alignment..Had our local chiropractor adjust her and after a few weeks she was back to normal
@zareena11975 ай бұрын
Brilliant, clear training. Thank you for making these videos for us!
@amymcewen82207 ай бұрын
I’m a new horse owner and my older gal is trying to have her way with me. Gotten worse over time. These videos have helped me learn how to handle her.
@arribaficationwineho329 ай бұрын
My father called her taking advantage of inexperienced owners as being “buffaloed”. She knows how to be ridden but knows she can control the owner.
@dl24679 ай бұрын
Totally agree. 90% of all unruly horses are due to their owners, not getting consistent or proper training. Non horse people have ruined alot due to no knowledge.
@pollynicklas52209 ай бұрын
I had a horse like this. Her former owner was a greenhorn and they would take her back if she acted up. It took a very short time to change her attitude!
@cathymarshall83279 ай бұрын
I'm happy the owners will come take lessons. Thanks for showing us how you handled it.
@KK-mm8ms9 ай бұрын
"What i am doing will save her life" I completely agree.
@DoubleDogDare549 ай бұрын
Like with kids, if you try to be their best friend they will take advantage of the situation, forcing you to go backwards and start all over again as a parent and as a horse owner. You cannot be EQUAL to a horse. You must be the leader or they will make (darn) sure they are the boss over you. That is how horses operate and you either operate under the same set of rules or they'll put you in the hospital.
@MalindaRyan-xi7et8 ай бұрын
So very true!!
@lazygardens9 ай бұрын
At 3:30 it's the horse version of covering your ears and chanting "I can't hearrr yooouuuu!"
@MalindaRyan-xi7et8 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣. I agree;)
@Alex-horsman9 ай бұрын
I did the same with some of my horses and they became better, they changed, but still I was thinking that I did something wrong, now I see that I did all correct!! Thanks!
@Loralarify8 ай бұрын
really nice demonstration of positive reinforcement & correction methods that demonstrate the right way to fix issues before they become deadly.
@danielalawrence80489 ай бұрын
Haflingers can sometimes be stubborn but once they undestand they cannot have things the way they like, they become good companions.
@lisaweinberger41978 ай бұрын
'We're gonna do this again, and your gonna be GOOD'😂 Love this comment and love your style!
@angeladillard32308 ай бұрын
I am so glad you shared the story of how she came to you. I experienced the exact same thing when my 8 year old mare foaled 3 months after I bought her! It got to where I wouldn’t go to the stall without a lunge whip. I got them off to a foaling barn with a professional just in time.
@Deanna-k4i9 ай бұрын
Amen thank you to bad the people that really need to hear and do these things won't listen or hear ❤
@caobita9 ай бұрын
Unfortunately. I forwarded the video to someone who hopefully WILL listen. His horses aren't a big problem yet, but the child is and so far he's not been taking things seriously enough
@danlindeke25619 ай бұрын
Your earning your fee today. Learned a lot today.
@qhride19 ай бұрын
Well done Tim for showing owners this because horses are “herd” animals they are not like a pet dog where a dog will treat you as number one a horse will read your body language and works out very quickly wether you are a leader or down the pecking order. You need to be firm if a horse starts to work out this this, first time owners can pet to much on a horse and loose that respect
@judyhartford50199 ай бұрын
Lots of parents would benefit from watching this! Clear and calm correction. Thanks Tim.
@sandralogue17746 ай бұрын
He is shaking the reins more than putting pressure on the bit to make her uncomfortable and pay attention to what he is doing.The horse isn't injured in any way.
@zoerolandevanrumt77453 ай бұрын
@@sandralogue1774Are you another jorse Whisperer? Have you ever had a metal torture device in your mouth then jank it 50 times the way he did and say what you are saying!you have no clue
@STARSanSTRIPES4 күн бұрын
Totally agree. The world this mare wants to live in doesn't exist. She'll end up dog food if she can't adapt. Well done ✅
@danidollface205 күн бұрын
Love this
@chocolatefrenzieya8 ай бұрын
I have no issue, at all. Thank you for saving her.
@jewelsluv679 ай бұрын
Between you and Steve Young , you guys have got to be my two favorite trainers ! The both of you are great trainers , knows what it takes in different areas of the training process and the horses and what they are telling you both... you both succeed in getting it done very well and its great watching you guys. What great horsemen both of you are ...love both of your guys video's!😉😊👍👏👏
@ltningstrike9 ай бұрын
That worked pretty quickly. I see youre in a Buffett state of mind !
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
I need to go shopping for work clothes. Lol.
@Mary-n4x7 ай бұрын
@@timandersonhorsetraining don’t you think that maybe she is reacting like that in order to protect herself after having a baby instead of being “pushy” and “disrespectful” as you call it. Animals sense a lot of feelings just like some people. It’s okay if some horses can’t have you ride them. She wasn’t being “disrespectful” at all and you didn’t have to be that harsh with the horse.
@PONYHEAVEN9 ай бұрын
In Germany we are having a discussion over the introduction of a compulsary exam, that owners of horses should have to pass, before buying a horse. An exam in horse handeling. So far, it is just optional.
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
On the surface that seems like a good idea but the deeper idea of the government regulating horse handling requiring specific techniques I think is a bad idea. Horses are individuals and this same problem in an arabian should be handled differently and a government agency does not know more than a professional handler.
@MalindaRyan-xi7et8 ай бұрын
@@timandersonhorsetrainingGood point!
@blondeenotsomuch7 ай бұрын
@@timandersonhorsetrainingthey are very strict on dogs. Some types are not allowed, others have to pass a viciousness test. I feel conflicted about gov't intrusion too. On the other hand our shelters are jammed full of bully breeds. Every Tom Dick and Harry this they will meet their rent by breeding their pitt bulls. Once again, there is no perfect solution, only imperfect trade offs.
@CalabroneDogs9 ай бұрын
You literally are saving her life. Literally. I do commend her owners for putting her with a good trainer who can hopefully readjust her.
@MalindaRyan-xi7et8 ай бұрын
Viewers on KZbin seem to understand that WAY more than Facebook viewers. Thank you for commenting!
@CalabroneDogs8 ай бұрын
@@MalindaRyan-xi7et FB has all the "My Little Pony" people who do not get that petting and carrots cannot correct all bad behavior.
@lorirobinson40048 ай бұрын
I used to know a Dutch trainer told me that haflingers were really hard Headed horses in general.
@rdred86938 ай бұрын
You saved both of their lives.
@MalindaRyan-xi7et8 ай бұрын
❤
@shellysonnen56989 ай бұрын
You do a great job by explaining that, and then sure enough we see the change in the horse by the end of the video!
@kajinsautumn98339 ай бұрын
"Oh shit! This guy means BUSINESS!"...
@MalindaRyan-xi7et8 ай бұрын
😂 Yep;)
@alycewich44724 ай бұрын
🤣😂🤣
@Dan-oj4iq8 ай бұрын
Keep in mind that he and his horse rehearsed this story line from the beginning so as to show the change of attitude to the viewer. And that is what is most amazing about the video.
@MalindaRyan-xi7et8 ай бұрын
Your comment confuses me. There is no rehearsal prior to Tim’s videos. Don’t think that’s even possible. This is real-life training…No rehearsal, no script, and no do-overs. It just doesn’t work that way when actually training horses.
@Dan-oj4iq8 ай бұрын
Of course. That was a tongue in cheek comment. As intelligent as a horse is, they haven't yet gotten to the stage I was suggesting.
@MalindaRyan-xi7et8 ай бұрын
Gotcha! My blonde runs deep, and I’ll be the first to admit that some tongue in cheek comments go right over my head🤦♀️🤷♀️. Thanks for clarifying!!
@cherylmillard20679 ай бұрын
1:26 This is also what dog's do, the rehearsed action of intimidation achieves the desired outcome, then aggression sets in. So many dogs end up in high kill shelters because of the "purely positive, positive reinforcement only" mindset. They frown on using training aids they deem aversive that will long term fix a dog's foul behavior, like prong and electronic collars. In many dogs to change their behavior, the unwanted behavior needs to suck bad enough to make that animal learn and not repeat it.
@cherylmillard20678 ай бұрын
@@judithmiller6670 It seems that you know absolutely nothing about me, my experience with horses and or training in general.
@grapeape19687 ай бұрын
Did have the foal make her aggressive?
@patriciaantolik67419 ай бұрын
What is ear plaque?
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
When I was editing the video I realized I should have talked about that. I will in a future video.
@peterneilsen62499 ай бұрын
Good morning all. Now Cupcake you know who the leader is, great job Tim. Thank you Tim & Melinda for video.😃😇
@tycox24449 ай бұрын
Well done there Tim with this Horse.
@sarahturner86259 ай бұрын
Is this Ace’s mom, perchance? I thought I remembered you saying he was a surprise foal and 1/2 Halflinger.
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
Yes this is Ace's mom.
@rutherose239 ай бұрын
What happened to her foal?
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
Her foal was Ace. I just started him riding and sent him home. He has his own videos.
@blondeenotsomuch7 ай бұрын
What became of the foal?
@educatedgypsee23516 күн бұрын
I wish you would watch the Clever Cowgirl approach. Dangerous usually means shes in pain, has she been checked after the foul? Teeth hips hoofs ? Its hard to be a good horse owner, but its not always attitude. Except for the trainers ego
@timandersonhorsetraining5 күн бұрын
This horse has been checked for pain and she is no trainer.
@TaylaBowerАй бұрын
It's their first horse so I can understand the owners should have told them that the horse was in foal.
@juliehmidmo9 ай бұрын
Is this the dam of the smaller black gelding you have in for training? You mentioned his dam was a Haflinger and the owners bought her not knowing she was bred. Sometimes you have to be firm to get the point across. Doesn't mean it is abusive. I think her improvement shows you did just what you should have.
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
Yes she is Ace's mom.
@freddelskutar86149 ай бұрын
This situation makes me think of two different theories about her not paying attention and not standing still for mounting. Would moving her feet by doing circles and changes of direction, essentially making her work, amd only stopping the pressure when she was close to mounting block work for her? Would this work create the desire in her to find the spot where you wouldnt make her work, the mounting block? Also, i think nagging this horse wont work either. She is tough minded girl and needs the ask, tell, promise approach so she knows the consequences of not trying to do what is asked of her. She needs to understand boundaries to be safer for novice people, like me and my loved ones. Thank you for explaining your approach and i think you are a very fair trainer.
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
I could have done the moving her feet like you've seen me do before. I didn't think that was a good way to approach it in her case because she seems very likely to be the kind of horse that once that is started she will always have to be lunged before riding. She is very pushy on the ground and I thought the better way to fix this that would carry over to starting to correct other ground problems was to take away her upper hand which is her pushing forward. Her breed being a haflinger was a big consideration in my decision. An arabian I would have used a different technique.
@freddelskutar86148 ай бұрын
Thank you Tim for explaining. I am learning lots from you and the different horses you work with.😊
@AshleyLehbauer6 ай бұрын
What would you do with an Arabian that moves away
@Gingerwalker.9 ай бұрын
Great example of how quick a bad attitude can be fixed with some no nonsense training. Love it. It is a lot easier to do small corrections for small issues than to have to send the horse out to a professional like yourself who has to lay down the law. Balance the size of the correction to the size of the issue. I have seen several good horses ruined by people who don't want to be "mean".
@MrEzekiel19827 ай бұрын
It’s not a game. I got two studs as a total beginner and once I understood I had a right to my own self respect everything changed (God bless Ray Hunt)
@n.weath76539 ай бұрын
Thank goodness they asked for help ! ❤
@shashakeeleh54689 ай бұрын
No huggy/Kissy here, I'm happy to say. Not that a rider has to be 'mean', but they have to be insistent and make sure dangerous behavior is corrected immediately.
@ltningstrike9 ай бұрын
Hes good at showing owners how to be more assertive so, if needed, they can make the correction necessary with assertion and confidence 👍
@shashakeeleh54689 ай бұрын
@@ltningstrike When I was 8 years old (long time ago) my Mom delivered the sad news that a little girl who I knew well and played with, 6 yrs. old, got kicked in the head by a horse and killed outright. To this day, I still don't know the story of what exactly occurred.
@PiggyLong-zz6uw3 ай бұрын
Good video
@JaymieMurphy-p4u9 ай бұрын
Mare has to earn having her hoofs picked. She knows better. She is getting exactly what she needs.
@faithfarmforever47959 ай бұрын
I'd actually love to have a horse of her breed only in a gelding..I'd take one like her over a flighty jumpy horse any day..I can fix one like her, but I can't ride the jumpy spooky ones very well any more..I'm a little long in the tooth now a days lol
@KerryDior9 ай бұрын
The owners have given this mare the opportunity to educate her by sending her to you Tim. Thank goodness as she could otherwise at an auction or kill pen.
@randikay91886 ай бұрын
That is beyond "bumping".
@BoninBrighton9 ай бұрын
Just speculation here but when she had her foal she probably became very protective towards it and learnt to disrespect the owners during that period- who may not have been aware of protective mare behaviour when they wanted to pet the surprise foal.
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
No not it.
@shellysonnen56989 ай бұрын
You're exactly right. People who are to soft to be a little tough on their horse...aren't doing them any favors. And yes they get worse and worse and end up at auction selling to meat buyers, so please help them by NOT being too soft and letting them get away with bad behavior ❤
@SharonGlass-vj5zvАй бұрын
That's not training. That's coercion.
@lydiagould30909 ай бұрын
Her attitude changed quickly when you mad things a bit tough for her. It's good the owner is coming to you for some lessons. People don't get taught these things at a riding school. It's horsemanship as opposed to just riding.
@randieraye43599 ай бұрын
Great job, Tim.
@shelm-b8p9 ай бұрын
Dominant mares will be always dominant. I have a dominant mustang mare. Me watching her on how she gets pushy with another horse taught me a lot. She does everything with determination. And this is how I treat my mare. I mean it when I ask for something. Not in an aggressive way but with full confidence. I had to learn to always be on spot. Btw I love my mare. She is very intelligent, a fast learner, and always eager to do anything with me.
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
You are right, dominant mare will always be dominant. The other side of that is a dominant mare will also give you everything they have if they respect your leadership.
@shelm-b8p9 ай бұрын
@@timandersonhorsetraining❤
@carolynstewart84659 ай бұрын
Adorable horse!❤❤❤❤❤
@patperrier96409 ай бұрын
This was a little rough to watch, but at the same time, as you explained your rationale, and as you calmly gave consequences for behavior, it was amazing to see her when everything clicked. I'm really kind of stunned that the prior owner didn't disclose the pregnancy.
@josephinestecak49456 ай бұрын
Definitely rough on that poor mouth. A bruised mouth won't help to have a working relationship!
@alycewich44724 ай бұрын
It's possible that the previous owner didn't know she was pregnant. That happened to me decades ago. I had loaned my mare to the local handicapable riding group. They noticed she was pregnant when they could see the baby moving inside her. So they sent her home to foal. After she weaned the baby, I allowed them to come and get her, but after that I wanted her with me so there were no more "midnight rendezvous" with their stallion. (We were neighbors so it wasn't a problem for them.)
@PONYHEAVEN9 ай бұрын
My video of the year.
@bitbybitfarmseast30858 ай бұрын
I respect your work. I am lazy. Once I step on the block I don,t move my feet. They have to work back and forth until they side up. I use a lead rope or dressage whip to show them where to be., My horses all side up 100% of the time.
@faithfarmforever47959 ай бұрын
I've got one like her..gelding..been running over people all his life - he would drag me off if he could - he will plow through you and will try to jerk the reins out of my hands so he can go where HE wants to go which is back to the barn - he will walk at a snails pace to go out away from the house/barn but almost does a running walk the minute you point back towards home/barn - he can't get away with it with me but I've started ground work to get him softer - had to be pretty hard with the back up cuz he just doesn't want to doesn't "feel" like it I'm okay with hey, I don't understand but hey let me drag you around and walk all over you is not acceptable.
@talonhatch93426 ай бұрын
You can have a wll trained horse and give it to someone that doesnt know what their doing then you have a train wreck
@lorirobinson40048 ай бұрын
Sorry about the miss spelling of the word hard headed
@catherinedemick11039 ай бұрын
Didnt take much for her to listen and behave better
@laurenamrhein66019 ай бұрын
Is this Ace’s mama?
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
Yes
@laurenamrhein66019 ай бұрын
@@timandersonhorsetraining she’s quite a smart lady. I’m sure she’ll be back on track soon
@g4ntino9 ай бұрын
I normally like your content, but this was hard to watch. Not because of you, but because of ignorant horse buyers that make the horse this way and they are the ones that pay the price. I guess I can say I'm happy they're getting help now, but had they gotten it in the first place and gotten a suitable horse, lessons, before the horse, then this horse wouldn't be in this state.
@rhondab97929 ай бұрын
People don't know what they don't know. In the end the owners absolutely did the right thing. And they were treated badly by the knowledgeable horseman that secretly sold them a pregnant mare.
@melodymacken97889 ай бұрын
@@rhondab9792 Nicely said.
@alycewich44724 ай бұрын
@@rhondab9792 There is a possibility that the previous owner didn't know she was pregnant. Decades ago I loaned my well trained mare to a handicapable riding group as they were short on horses. Since they lived nearby it worked well for both of us. However, she ended up pregnant by the owners' stallion. No one even knew about it until they could see the foal moving around in her belly. At that point she came back home so that I could foal her out. After she had weaned the foal, the program was allowed to use her again, but they had to come and get her every time they wanted to use her and bring her back when the lessons were done. I didn't want any more midnight romances resulting in a baby that wasn't a purebred.
@JohnAmidon-c6r9 ай бұрын
👍🏻👍🏻
@lisasimonds36687 ай бұрын
Don’t show it then
@raecrowe95149 ай бұрын
And that's why I chose Rockwool bats. Sound proofs, fire retardant, can be cut with a steak knife, and expands to fit between the trusses and wall studs so it doesn't sag. Just sayin'.
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
Totally irrelevant here. Also I used to run a very large electrical contracting company and that insulation makes the price go up in the winter and would not work around it in the summer. Not a good product.
@yessabell17079 ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@mikerump91629 ай бұрын
As a trainer you should remember that respect is a two way street you cannot expect it unless you give it
@RobertSkene-qw3ob9 ай бұрын
Barn yard or Bone yard ! Your choice?🇨🇦😂
@joadams18909 ай бұрын
Interesting that things changed when she had baby. Wonder if she was very possessive with foal. Owners may have become intimidated and let her get by with things because of baby.
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
No having the baby is not what triggered the change. Learning she could push around her owners is what triggered the change. Having the baby is why the owners became soft to her pushyness which caused the cycle.
@cathydavis18779 ай бұрын
Riders r lazy. Not wanting to fully follow through! U r doing a great job!
@JudyMiller-w7k2 ай бұрын
There is a saying that the child who is the hardest to love, is the one who needs it the most. I’m sure this applies to horses as well. (Even Cupcake! 😁)
@diannanash56719 ай бұрын
Horrible to watch. She is in pain and trying to protect herself. Its not the animals falt that people are ignorant. Causing pain is not necessary in training. Pressure, yes, but not pain. It takes patience.
@davidgray15158 ай бұрын
Stupid owners who made her this way is why horses end up in the kill pen
@Ola-th4kf9 ай бұрын
Why are you doing it to a lame horse? She is not resting her left leg. She is protecting because it probably hurts.
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
I covered that in her last video and this video. Yes it hurts but it's not stopping her from trying to hurt people. How do you expect anyone to help her when she is trying to kill them. Use come common sense.
@mikerump91629 ай бұрын
Come on just looking away is not disrespect she standing quietly and waiting for you shes bracing when she opens her mouth because she knows you are going to yank on her mouth
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
Never deleted a single comment of yours. I allow wrong comments too.
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
You should work on reading horse better. Listen to what the horse says not what you want to hear.
@melindaharrington75889 ай бұрын
It is either have her behaviour challenged and corrected now then send her home. Or end up, being bought by the Doggers at the sale yards.
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
Yes. I also explained the different situation and why. Every horse is different with different problems and different personalities that require correcting issues differently. Until you can read a horse and adapt correctly to the horse your horsemanship will stagnate.
@alycewich44724 ай бұрын
@@timandersonhorsetraining 💯
@JudyMiller-w7k2 ай бұрын
Did you notice the way she jumped every time you slammed the mounting block down beside her? She was definitely startled- no wonder she wanted to get away from it. She might have behaved better if the training session had started on a more positive note.
@catwoman25962 ай бұрын
No, she's learned how to 'act' to get what she wants.
@Vic0416Ай бұрын
Training is about teaching not flooding and being hard on a horse.
@heidipowers37485 ай бұрын
just because the owners do not know what they are doing that is not the horses fault the way you treated this horse with the bit in her mouth is sick you do not belong around horses
@mikerump91629 ай бұрын
Oimproperly disciplining a horse even at what you think is the right time is abuse
@zoerolandevanrumt77453 ай бұрын
The only dangerous i see is you banger her theeth out! You trow a block if wood at her and she is supose to not move away from pressure? You trow things at her she moves every time and still you say she is not scared if it? Wtf? Maybe you should exercise yourself a bit more that breathing sound very unhealthy and un fit! Ofcourse she is opening her mouth after all the janking and abuse you just did to her roof of her mouth and theeth!the bit us not a stearingwheel mister i dont even know what the hell you doing to teach people how to abuse horses?!
@KayPiras-w9d9 ай бұрын
This horse is in pain
@hollywill22269 ай бұрын
What do you see?
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
Yes she is. I told you what it was in her last video.
@Joke1978ful29 күн бұрын
This training is disgusting
@KayPiras-w9d9 ай бұрын
You don’t need to yank on the mouth . I disagree with this intimidation
@timandersonhorsetraining9 ай бұрын
Good. Those beliefs keep me in business fixing the problems they cause.
@wetdewlap87418 ай бұрын
Did the best that they could ??? except get a pre-purchase exam by a vet… sorry being a first time horse owner, that is stupid as fck not to do