Quote:
The difficult thing is, some actions are a trick if done when you intended to cue it, but dangerous behavior when done at any other time... such that a horse that *thinks* she saw/felt/heard a cue, or is trying to offer it to get a reward or because she knows you want *something* but she isn't sure what, can end up doing some serious damage, all unintentionally.
Anything involving waving body parts around is, to my mind, in that category. And thus should perhaps be taught to a more restricted 'audience' of horses than other tricks like 'flap your lips' or 'pick up the dropped crop' - not that they *can't* backfire, but it's more likely to be a nuisance than something that gets your health insurance coverage involved.
I know a dressage trainer who got hurt pretty good by a horse who thought he was being asked to do the Spanish Walk (where one or both forelegs are raised really high and straight out forward as the horse walks)... so it is not only something that happens to amateurs and young horses.
Pat
The difficult thing is, some actions are a trick if done when you intended to cue it, but dangerous behavior when done at any other time... such that a horse that *thinks* she saw/felt/heard a cue, or is trying to offer it to get a reward or because she knows you want *something* but she isn't sure what, can end up doing some serious damage, all unintentionally.
Anything involving waving body parts around is, to my mind, in that category. And thus should perhaps be taught to a more restricted 'audience' of horses than other tricks like 'flap your lips' or 'pick up the dropped crop' - not that they *can't* backfire, but it's more likely to be a nuisance than something that gets your health insurance coverage involved.
I know a dressage trainer who got hurt pretty good by a horse who thought he was being asked to do the Spanish Walk (where one or both forelegs are raised really high and straight out forward as the horse walks)... so it is not only something that happens to amateurs and young horses.
Pat