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Can I make two suggestions here. First, if you consider thoroughbreds typically "high strung and neurotic" it is perhaps best
not to own one, at least not with one with whom you do not get along well with from the start. That mindset, and TB minds, tend to go poorly together and produce depressing or problematic long-term results.
Second, I am still not seeing how the things you mention are not simply TRAINING ISSUES. (Beyond the 'personality not meshing with yours' part, that is). Horses at the track do not get schooled in most of the sorts of things a "regular" riding horse needs to know, and I'm not just talking about riding stuff like 'inside leg' or 'half-halt', I'm talking also about lots of everyday stuff like being loaded in a trailer "the non racehorse way" (which often involves two strong men linking arms behind the horse's butt and *putting* the horse in, bodily; plus which a lot of racehorses have no experience of 2-horse type trailers). And even if she had professional training after coming off the track, it's never a permanent thing.
You have to TRAIN a horse to load -- and in most cases, I would bet anything it's true in this case, you have to back up further and install/reinstall the basic skills needed to even *start* teaching the horse to load properly. Likewise you have to TRAIN many horses to be comfortable riding away from a group of other horses. And probably pretty much anything else you are having problems with.
Finally, an observation about this nervous high-strung temperament you feel she has -- if you are putting 10 lbs of grain products into her each day, NO KIDDING a Thoroughbred's brain is falling out
If it were my horse, or if you were my student, I would say:
1) 'nuff already with all the hard feed! She is BY NO MEANS thin or starving -- she is not halter-horse fat, but that's not healthy anyhow, and there is plenty of leeway for "risking" the possibility of her losing a few pounds in transitioning to a different diet. Give her lots of free-choice *good* hay, preferably an alfalfa mix; possibly additional beet pulp if she will eat enough to be worthwhile; see what management changes you can do to happy her up; and if she still seems to need more calories, try a small amount of NON sweet feed (pellets, or oats or corn or a mix) as a base to pour oil on as much as she will allow or add rice bran to. And then accept her as she is and work with that, rather than trying to sculpt her body into your ideal of a horse shape by means of diet. If you can get her happy, relaxed, understanding, and in good productive work, a lot of the body shape issues you're seeing will, I promise, *gradually* fade away.
2) 'nuff already with the 'she is not quiet' thing. They're training issues. Go back to square one like she didn't know anything -- and I can pretty much guarantee that she doesn't know anything like as much as you're assuming she should, and possibly your body language is not having the desired effect either and needs tuning. These problems are *fixable* (if you want), not an immutable result of a defective brain.
and 3) if you don't like the horse it is probably better to send her on her way. There is always someone else out there looking for a free horse, and some of them might actually LIKE and get along with her. Or, if you cut out most or all the grain and treat the problems as a training project ONLY, you may actually find out that you like her and she isn't so bad after all
Good luck, best wishes to you both,
Pat
Have to totally agree here with Pat. Lots of warning signs should go up everytime someone gets a free horse. And basically nothing is totally free in life. You take on a responsibility to care for an animal in whatever condition it is when you own that animal.
First thing I would have done is the Panacur Power Pak followed by a week of Probiotics to straighten out the gut. Teeth and handler issues can cause rearing - very typical problem actually. Just had my daughter fix a horse and it's rider from the rearing issues. It was a lack of the horse's training and the lack of the riders ability to know what the heck he was doing. Sad it had been going on so long and the horse was labeled a bad horse. Now he is much happier and so is the rider - who understands his mistakes.
A nervous horse can also be a sign of a nervous or overly dominate handler. Not saying you are, but maybe try approaching the horse in a calm and reassuring manner with a lot of praise for even the littlest thing. Sounds like this horse needs to learn how to get the right answer and go from the ground up all over again.