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- Newsgroups: rec.equestrian
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!malgudi.oar.net!chemabs!mlr21
- From: mlr21@cas.org (Mary Lee Raines)
- Subject: Re: Help Dog chases Horse
- Message-ID: <1992Dec21.184923.29050@cas.org>
- Sender: mlr21@cas.org ()
- Organization: Chemical Abstracts Service
- References: <1992Dec19.182046.1142@mala.bc.ca>
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 18:49:23 GMT
- Lines: 62
-
- In article <1992Dec19.182046.1142@mala.bc.ca>, bigrasl@mala.bc.ca writes:
- |> Help!!! I need advice on this one.
- |> I have a nine month old male standard schnauzer who has taken up
- |> chasing my horse. He has done this four times to date.
- |> It has occurred when I went to take him out of his pen adn he jumped
- |> through my arms and took off after her. The last time he ran her
- |> 3/4 of her pasture till I was able to cath him. Also this last time
- |> she kicked at him three times with her hind legs. In order for her
- |> not to continue kicking at him I made her go faster so that she
- |> couldn't make contact. It appears that they are both jealous of each
- |> other. A couple of days ago I had the dog on lead and had him in a
- |> sit outside the paddock and I was letting him look at the horse.
- |> He was behaving himself fine however, the horse started trotting in
- |> the paddock as if she wanted him to chase her. I bought the dog
- |> in hopes of being able to take him out on the trail with me when
- |> he got older. So I would really like them to get along. How does
- |> one go about this? Any help in this matter would be appreciated.
-
- I've never really "worked" to make this kind of thing happen. I've
- just always had dogs, and my dogs have always just kind of gotten
- along with the horses. Doesn't mean nobody ever got kicked, though--
- but nothing serious.
-
- And my dogs have run the gamut from basically ignoring the horses
- (Husky, and a Collie X), to playing tag with the horses (Dalmatian,
- and a terrier mix) to trying to boss the horses (little terrier mix).
- (And all of them have gone with me while riding.)
-
- Assuming you have board fence (i.e., not electric). I would tie the
- dog on 8-10 lead so he can get under the fence.
- That way, the dog can't chase the horse, and, if the horse were to
- try to hurt the dog, the dog could get under the fence.
- Get yourself out of the way (if you have to watch, do it from the
- barn, out of sight of the critters). Leave them alone
- long enough for them to work it out on their own (that's probably
- a couple hours). Do this every day for a few days, and I would
- assume that the horse and the dog will figure out their relationship.
-
- By the way, the Dalmatian and the terrier would run into the field and
- chase my horses (well, the young horses; the older ones chose not to run).
- Then the dogs would stop and turn away from the horses and look over
- their shoulders at them. You could just about hear them saying,
- "Hey, c'mon, chase me, it's fun." Then the horses would chase the
- dogs out of the field, and everybody would stop for a while, then the
- game would start up again, usually until the horses decided they would
- rather eat grass than chase dogs. Then they would just stop, put their
- heads down to graze, and the game would be over.
-
- Mary Lee
- Ravenswood Apps
- Ohio
-
- P.S. If you get everything worked out between the dog and the horse,
- but then you find the dog trying to get bossy while you're riding
- (my wee terrier mix doesn't think a horse with a rider should do
- anything over a trot), you might try a squirt gun with water in it.
- You'll have to play cowboy here, riding, asking for a canter,
- and squirting the dog if he tries to interfere. If straight water doesn't
- do it, add a little (not much) pepper juice).
-
- I'm just bringing this part up because schnauzers are terriers and terriers
- tend to be bossy (sorry for the gross generalization).
-