Home

Horse links

How to read
a horse's
emotions

Paso Finos
and mustangs
at play

A stallion's
love life

How to Buy
a Horse at a
Livestock
Auction

How to Breed
for Color

Killer Buyer:
True Stories

Visit to Canyon
de Chelly

Sandi Claypool's
Mustangs

Horse photo
gallery

Longears

Poultry photo
gallery
 

 

Sandia's Foals, continued ...

When we unloaded the foals into Coquetta's pasture, she blew softly into each foal's nostrils. The foals stretched their necks and opened and closed their mouths as if they wanted to nurse. This is how foals tell their elders "Don't beat me up, I'm just a baby." Coquetta nuzzled each of them, then wheeled and kicked. They fled a few yards, then turned and made more "I'm a just a baby" mouthings.

A few hours later she began grooming the foals as if she were their natural mother. She had kicked at them just to make sure they respected her.

The foals sure didn't respect us. Foals often play by biting and kicking. Mary had already warned us that Vashti, at only two weeks of age, had thrown a kick that sent her to the emergency room. Eleven stitches -- in the face. Since then no one had taught either of them any better.

I told my daughters that whenever Vashti tried to bite or kick one of us, we should bonk her right back. After a few bonks she quit roughhousing with us.

Lightfoot was a harder case. After a few bonks he learned to sneak up behind his victim, kick and gallop away before we could hit back. When we got wise to him sneaking up, Lightfoot discovered he could gallop by at top speed and lash out with a hoof.

I went to another church member, Dave Jensen, for help.

Dave's hobby was training draft horses that everyone else had given up upon. Serious, dangerous horses, as tall at the withers as a football player, and weighing as much as a Volkswagen. He gave me a trick to try on Lightfoot.

I went out into the pasture and walked around, la de da, la de da, I'm sooo innocent… Sure enough, after a few minutes Lightfoot looked up from grazing on the hill above me and leapt into a full gallop.

As he thundered down at me, he must have been expecting my usual hand waving and yelling to make him veer aside. Instead, at the last moment, I whipped a bath towel out from behind my back and threw it at him.
Yeow!!! Lightfoot jumped, whirled, and landed at a dead gallop in the opposite direction. After 50 yards or so he slowed down and dashed in circles, bucking and throwing fits.

He never charged a human again.

Lightfoot liked to lean on people. He'd lean on me a little bit, then more, and finally enough to force me to move over. I'd yell and hit and he'd back off, but then he'd try it again the next day. And the next. Grrr. Dave told me that all I had to do next time Lightfoot tried it was to put a judo move on him and throw him to the ground. Yeah, right, easier said than done.

More --->>


© 2022 Carolyn M. Bertin. All rights reserved.