RayNC
Exploring the pasture
OUCH is right!!! That is going to really hurt for a while. That is one nasty bight.
Biting is really bad and you can't let him get away with that. You have to show him YOU are boss. When my horse acts up with the farrier, the farrier will jab him really hard in the gut a few times. Hard enough where he feels it and makes him very uncomfortable. My horse is very sweet but he has his days sometimes when it comes to doing his feet. Well, he always remembers what happens if he acts up. You can see him thinking.
The thing is......... the horse doesn't see the farrier hit him. All the horse knows is when he behaves badly something will hurt. I would seriously watch out when hitting/smacking in the face. You don't want your horse head shy. If your reflexes were quick enough a good punch in the mouth would have worked. Hey, don't get me wrong....... I love horses but at the same time I'm not going to let a horse beat me up. Just remember how they behave in a herd and how the pecking order works. Not to pretty.
You have had him a week. You don't know him very well but he is picking up on you. Look at all the little signs like Michickenwrangler suggested. Feel along his body and watch everything on his head and see what changes. If you go along his spine he may dip his back...... that means something. If you run down his leg and he picks it up to "pull away" somethings up there. It's the subtle things you have to watch. Just like he watches your body movements you have to watch his.
He also has to learn patience. If he doesn't like something, to bad (as long as it doesn't hurt him)...... keep doing it until he does it right. Otherwise you teach him just the opposite and you don't want to do that. It will be a test of wills sometimes. He will learn to trust you. He is young yet. At 4 yrs old he has a ways to go yet.
I have a mini horse that is 3 1/2. I just got him Jan. 31 of this year. He has never been trained to do anything. Friendly as can be but OMG....... he gets into a lot of stuff and is very curious. Hysterical little bugger too. He is with my 18 yr old qh. It's working out pretty well but I did have to make a small stall for him since he steals my 16.1 hh qh's food. He has tried to bite but it's a tasting thing. He gets a snap in the nose. It works because it's quick and he doesn't know where it comes from.
It will come in time. Don't rush things. One step at a time. I'm sure he will be great once you guys get to know each other. Practice you quick relfexes!
Biting is really bad and you can't let him get away with that. You have to show him YOU are boss. When my horse acts up with the farrier, the farrier will jab him really hard in the gut a few times. Hard enough where he feels it and makes him very uncomfortable. My horse is very sweet but he has his days sometimes when it comes to doing his feet. Well, he always remembers what happens if he acts up. You can see him thinking.
The thing is......... the horse doesn't see the farrier hit him. All the horse knows is when he behaves badly something will hurt. I would seriously watch out when hitting/smacking in the face. You don't want your horse head shy. If your reflexes were quick enough a good punch in the mouth would have worked. Hey, don't get me wrong....... I love horses but at the same time I'm not going to let a horse beat me up. Just remember how they behave in a herd and how the pecking order works. Not to pretty.
You have had him a week. You don't know him very well but he is picking up on you. Look at all the little signs like Michickenwrangler suggested. Feel along his body and watch everything on his head and see what changes. If you go along his spine he may dip his back...... that means something. If you run down his leg and he picks it up to "pull away" somethings up there. It's the subtle things you have to watch. Just like he watches your body movements you have to watch his.
He also has to learn patience. If he doesn't like something, to bad (as long as it doesn't hurt him)...... keep doing it until he does it right. Otherwise you teach him just the opposite and you don't want to do that. It will be a test of wills sometimes. He will learn to trust you. He is young yet. At 4 yrs old he has a ways to go yet.
I have a mini horse that is 3 1/2. I just got him Jan. 31 of this year. He has never been trained to do anything. Friendly as can be but OMG....... he gets into a lot of stuff and is very curious. Hysterical little bugger too. He is with my 18 yr old qh. It's working out pretty well but I did have to make a small stall for him since he steals my 16.1 hh qh's food. He has tried to bite but it's a tasting thing. He gets a snap in the nose. It works because it's quick and he doesn't know where it comes from.
It will come in time. Don't rush things. One step at a time. I'm sure he will be great once you guys get to know each other. Practice you quick relfexes!