Training Tip: Horse Bites When Desensitized

0323_Tip

Question: Is it OK to reprimand a horse for trying to bite you when you are desensitizing? I’m working with a colt that is almost 4 months old. When I would touch a certain part of his chest, he would try to bite me—not my hand, me. I would reprimand him and then go straight back to touching that area until he no longer tried this. Was it technically OK to do this, or should I have done something different? – Sierra Burnett

Clinton’s Answer: Anytime your horse is disrespectful to you, no matter what you’re doing with him, you need to correct him. This is especially true of biting—it’s a very dangerous behavior that can turn deadly, no matter how innocent it seems to be with young horses. How you handled the situation is what I would have done.

Biting is a very forward action— the horse is coming at you with the goal of getting you to move your feet. It’s how horses communicate with each other in a herd and get other horses to move their feet. Remember, because horses are a herd animal, everything in their life revolves around herd dynamics. The number one horse in a herd earned his position by proving to all of the other horses that he could move their feet. Whoever moves first, loses. Even if a horse is a cute and fuzzy 4-month-old foal, he knows what he’s doing and his behavior needs to be nipped in the bud fast.

On a side note, when I get asked questions the way you presented yours, where you had a problem, came up with the solution and got the result you were looking for and then wanted to know if you did the right thing, it always slightly amuses me. I’m not poking fun at you, so don’t take this the wrong way, but if your solution took care of the problem, don’t worry about it being what I would have done or any other horseman would have done. If it worked, it worked. End of story. Part of being a great horseman is learning how to think on your feet. Have confidence in yourself.

More News

Back to all news

See All
0710_03

8 years ago

Gastric Ulcers

By Standlee Premium Western Forage What are they? Equine gastric ulcers are caused because gastric acid (hydrochloric acid secreted by…

Read More
0219_02

7 years ago

Get Off the Fence: Pursue Your Dream

If you’ve been on the fence about attending the Clinician Academy, now is the time to act! A couple of…

Read More
1206_01

9 years ago

Special Offer: Participate in Clinton’s 3-Day Fundamentals Clinics for $850

Clinton’s spreading the holiday cheer by giving everyone 15% off all of his horsemanship clinics now through December 25th. That…

Read More
1202_Tip

6 months ago

Training Tip: How to Progress Through the Method

Question: I’ve been doing the Method on my 2-year-old. Are the riding sections of the Intermediate and Advanced suitable for…

Read More