TRUE TRAINING 1 - A New Baby

Dec 29, 2019 by Janet Jones

                My new horse is here! He’s a three-year-old Dutch Warmblood, twelve hundred fifty pounds of curiosity, muscle, and baby teeth. Within three days, he knew his new name and trotted across a six-acre pasture to come to me. Now, this is the kind of “catching” I like. It’s easy to teach when a horse is new, young, and temporarily separated from buddies. True can see other horses, but he’s not ready to be turned out with them yet. So, for the moment, I’m his One-And-Only. He’s happy to come running when I call.

 

                The little guy trailered for three days to get here. Most shippers try to go too far in one haul. The best outfit I could find ran a clean safe rig with ample food and water, but they still wanted to drive 12 hours at a stretch. True’s veterinarian put the kabosh on that. Six hours max, he said, especially in a slot. Hauling is tough on horses—even calm travellers have higher heart rates, heartbeat interval variations, blood pressures, eye temperatures, and cortisol levels. These are signs of distress… so if we can make road trips a little easier for our four-legged friends, why not? I paid the best shipper a little extra to haul True only six hours a day in a box stall that allowed him to move freely and lie down.

 

                 My plan is to center this blog around True’s training—on the ground, in the barn, in Western and English flatwork, basic dressage, and jumping. If he enjoys other disciplines, we’ll have fun with them too. (He spun away from a bird the other day at about 90 degrees per millisecond, so he might be better at reining than trail!) True has a lot to learn and some of it might surprise you. We’ll look at big lessons, small details, bonding, learning, and the long development of brain-to-brain communication between horse and human. Along the way, True is sure to offer a few cute antics for entertainment. Join us for the ride!