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When your horse won’t load

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I think we’ve all been there. You know, standing behind your trailer with the ramp down and your horse’s feed firmly planted on terra firma, determined not to move even an inch. The Clinton Anderson video above offers some good advice for how to load the difficult horse. Not the horse that is genuinely scared; the horse that decides it just doesn’t want to get on.

None of my horses came to me as “good loaders”, in fact I can remember a few epically long mornings and afternoons where I was determined not to quit until the horse was standing on the trailer. Years ago I missed an event because of trailering issues, and I had an “exciting” experience with Freedom the first time I trailered him alone — and he realized that he was alone!

Thankfully, all my horses have gotten over it and now cheerfully hop on and ride quietly. I guess they’ve figured out that trailering usually means that we’re going to do something fun.

Today, I saw a first. A horse that had been trailered to the hunt refused to get on the trailer to go home. After more than an hour of bribery, cajoling and threatening, the owner decided to ride him home. 9 miles. After hunting. Thank goodness it was a beautiful day.

Since we’ve all been there, we also know that lots of people helping you try to load your recalcitrant horse is not always a recipe for success. Too many people, too many brooms or other flying objects can just get your horse worked up. The worst case scenario is when someone gets hurt. But even the best case scenario can get a bit dicey.

My main techniques for successful loading are:

A few posts where I’ve addressed loading issues before include:

Trailering Safely: Loading Tips

Getting my Problem Horse to Load

Have any of you had a horse that really, truly wouldn’t get on a trailer? What did you do?

 

 

 

 

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