Simply speaking, horses are social, group living herbivores that
evolved to live on open grassland. This means that they have developed
mental abilities that enable them to thrive in social situations, make
efficient use of their home range, and avoid succumbing to predators.
Therefore horses are capable of recognising large numbers of
individuals, and remembering how those individuals have treated them so
that they can respond accordingly.
They can recognise potential predators, and assess the risk of being
eaten today from having learned about what predator behaviour
constitutes a threat.
And they are incredibly good at learning about their local geography,
what to graze, where and when, where water is, even in drought, where
to find shelter in a variety of weather conditions, and most
importantly, how to travel between these places.
What they are not necesarily capable of is rationalising as we humans
do. For example, a horse is unlikely to realise that the carrots given
to him ten minutes after the return from a ride were for being brave
about a tractor and jumping a particularly challenging obstacle. As far
as the horse is concerned, those events and anything associated with
them were left back on the ride, and are not present with him whilst
relaxing on the yard enjoying his carrots!
Appreciating this is also to appreciate the normal lifestyle and
mental faculties of horses, meaning that much of what we ask horses to
do, such as live in stables and suppress their flight instinct so we can
ride them, are not particularly normal for them at all, even though we
frequently expect these things of the horse and more!
When I
consider the origins and maintenance of problem behaviour, and how to go
about fixing a problem or gaining a more emotionally stable horse most
capable of being trained, I have the horse’s natural existence at heart
quite simply because a horse struggles to be anything else.
Horses function best when they are managed and trained in a way that
is as close as possible to that for which nature designed them.
Fortunately there are a variety of means of accomodating the horse's
natural behaviour even on yards where the obvious things such as year
round turn out and stable herds are limited.
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