ILL, I hope you recover your cattle without incident.
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I understand that people buy horses without knowing anything, I've even done it before by buying a horse that was too advanced for me, now I know better, and I never blamed the horse. But that's not a reason for someone not to train a horse how they like. The person buying the horse should educate themselves ahead of time. And I know realistically that it'll never be that way in the world, but it's not on the animal or the type of training it has. Now I personally would not train a horse to do those types of tricks unless I 100% planned on keeping that horse forever, and if I made sure I was well educated in all the other training leading up to those tricks first. And I know people will say "well you can't promise you're gonna keep a horse forever becuase you don't know what circumstances you're gonna be under in the future" no. I don't believe that. When you have kids you don't say "well I really love this kid, and I plan on keeping it, but you never know, I might lose my job in the future and need to sell it" and for me it's the same with horses and dogs, unless I buy that animal knowing beforehand that there's a possibility of me selling it. There's no possibility of me EVER selling June. She'll die with me and when she does she's gonna be buried on my property even if I have to did a 10 foot hole. So in other words she's a horse that I could teach Liberty tricks to if I wanted to, and if I ever have the skills to do so. I've also heard way too many bad things about clicker and treat training. To me, pressure and release is the only way to go.
And good luck with your cattle!
I've had horses in my lifetime, and have had to sell them, in order to move and start life over. I've never done that with my children, but I have other livestock, including my bottlefed goats that I was particularly attached too.
It's nice to think when you get a horse, you're going to keep it forever. But the reality is, horses live for a long time, and odds are, especially if they get injured, or you end up wanting to do different sports, you'll need to rehome ones that no longer suit your needs down the road.
Unless you have unlimited grazing space to put older horses, or unsuitable horses to pasture and afford feed, vet, ferrier, floating, and other stuff for them... you will simply just run out of the money.
And, if you choose to just have 1 horse your entire life, then it doesn't matter how you train it to suit your needs. No one else will end up with it's bad habits, if it has any.
But, the reality is, very few people go into a horse, thinking they are going to own the horse forever. with the exception of adopting an elderly horse to begin with
Also - usually (at least down here) they burn cattle, and horses that die. Putting them in the ground creates a lot of bacteria that can get into water tables.