Training Tip: Horse Acts Snarly Around Food

0604_Tip

Q: I have a 4-year-old Quarter Horse filly. When I approach her with the grain bowl, her ears go flat back. If I walk away with it, her ears come back up. Is this her being disrespectful? If it is, what would be the best method to correct this behavior? – Siri

A: A horse that pins her ears at you when you feed her is a disrespectful horse. It’s that simple. The best fix for any behavioral problem is to teach the horse the Fundamentals exercises. The horse being dominant is just a symptom of a cause. Earn her respect by moving her feet forwards, backwards, left and right, and the problem will likely take care of itself.

If that doesn’t nip the problem in the bud, then you can set a bucket of grain in the middle of the roundpen or other open area and hustle her feet around it. Make her work up a bit of a sweat. You want this to not be fun for her. Show her that even though there is food in the picture, she still has to respect you and you can control her feet.

Then let her rest beside the food. As long as she has a good attitude, meaning she’s not snarling at you, she gets to rest and relax. If she pins her ears back at you, you put her back to work. When she stops pinning her ears and has a good attitude, then you can let her have the food.

You may read that and think I’m being too harsh to your horse. After all, the horse isn’t physically hurting you when she pins her ears. But let’s face facts, a horse being grumpy and pinning his ears is just as bad as him striking out at you or kicking you. What does a horse do after pinning his ears? He backs the threat up with his hind feet.

Horses always warn that they’re unhappy by pinning back their ears. If they’re ignored, then they back up and act like they’re going to kick. If they’re still ignored, then they kick.

There’s not much difference between a thought and an action. A horse will always give you a warning that he’s about to be disrespectful. It’s your responsibility to read his body language and act accordingly.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0221_Tip

3 years ago

Training Tip: Why You Need Your Horses’ Respect When Feeding in a Group

Herd dynamics rule your horses’ world, which makes walking into a herd of horses with feed dangerous. While some horses…

Read More
0119_03

5 years ago

Meet Method Ambassador Chase Tipton

Chase grew up on his family’s East Tennessee farm, where they bred and raised Tennessee Walkers. The Tiptons showed the…

Read More
0122_01

7 years ago

Clinician Academy Already 1/3 Full

The 2020 Clinician Academy slated to take place May 4th – June 19th at the Downunder Horsemanship Ranch is already…

Read More
FILES2f20142f082f0819_Tip.jpg.jpg

12 years ago

Training Tip: Reward and Respect Must be Balanced

In general, the more you spoil your horse, the less he will respect you. People often make that mistake when…

Read More