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As the story unfolded it became apparent that Milo had a run-in with a big bull elk.
One of the exercises we do in my clinics involves having riders pass each other weaving in the opposite direction. When horses and riders can do this proficiently, I ask them to slap hands, first at the walk, then at the trot. This is demanding for the horses and riders. Not only does it require accurate control over the horses, but also the horses must be well desensitized to the slapping and close passing. As we ramped this challenging exercise up a notch in Sedalia, Colorado, one of the better-trained horses suddenly whirled dangerously. June stayed with Milo until he quieted down, then she came over to me and asked for help. I had the riders in the clinic circle Milo and June at a walk while they stood still then we moved up to a trot. Everything was fine until I asked June to push Milo into walk and face oncoming riders. Again when horses trotted toward Milo, he became all unglued, dangerously so. I climbed on him and tried to support him through the same challenges, but he whirled violently. Milo’s Elk ConfrontationAs it turned out, there was a lot more to the story than originally met the eye. Milo was a seven-year-old dark bay quarter horse of about fifteen hands. He was well built and very athletic with an intelligent look. But he was worried and had ulcers to prove it. Several people had owned him before June and something very disturbing had taken place. As the story unfolded it became apparent that Milo had had a run-in with a big bull elk. It was not clear whether the elk had actually hit Milo, but there had been some kind of incident, a close call, and Milo had just not been the same since the incident. Once he was moving along at a good fast walk, I lifted his front legs with a firm yank on the rope from his off side. He immediately went to his knees and looked around as if to say, “What is this all about?” June and I lowered our stature and I cautioned everyone watching to be very quiet and still. I eased in and stroked Milo’s face, eyes, and ears. I got my fingers into his mouth and helped him find trust and relaxation, then backed off. He struggled for a few minutes, then very quietly laid down with a deep groan, just as horses commonly do when finding their own way down. I immediately went in and reassured him, stroking his neck and talking soothingly, then asked June to so the same. " He needs to know you’re there and everything is okay,” I instructed. June eased into place keeping her stature low and knelt beside him. “Be ready to roll back. He could lunge up anytime, so be careful and don’t have your head hanging over him.” June helped Milo relax at his head as I worked to relax his back half. His tail was soft and his leg on the high side eventually found its way to the ground - a good sign - he was handling the process quite well. When he seemed reasonably content I had June move out away from Milo and begin walking half circles back and forth within his vision. “Talk to him June.” “It’s okay Milo. You’re going to be alright,” she cooed over and over again. But this was stressful for him. He would sit up when bothered and watch her intently as she walked by, then relax and work his mouth again as I eased him back down. Time and again we worked through this same scenario. The movement concerned him to the point of needing to bring himself up and observe exactly what was happening. Time and again I helped him lay back down and relax and learn to trust. Gradually he found it and began to handle June’s meandering back and forth. “Okay. Now I need a rider to walk around the outside, way out, quietly.” June’s friend Cindy was on a striking sorrel paint of which she had complete control. Slowly she began riding serpentines forty feet from the edge of the pen. Suddenly Milo shot up onto his knees and lunged forward with fear in his eyes. “Move back, way back,” I yelled. June rolled back away into the sand onto her side, her face planted into the soft sand. Cindy quietly walked off away from the round pen. June and I calmed Milo back down and he slowly relaxed again. I helped him find his way onto his side as he watched Cindy intensely. “Okay, now start working back this way in a winding fashion,” I instructed Cindy. She followed instructions perfectly and wound her way back to the edge of the round pen as Milo kept a close eye on her. With a big sigh he let out a huge breath of air and with a little encouragement found his way back all the way down. “What a boy Milo. What a boy,” I whispered over and over. Plastic wand!! The Moment of TrustI slowly and gently removed all his paraphernalia as he patiently waited. When the hobbles and surcingle were off he sensed his moment and stood up. It’s quite common to have horses lie for fifteen or twenty minutes so relaxed and quiet and glad to have found peace, but not Milo. I rubbed and loved him up on one side as June did the same on the other. He licked his lips and dropped his head as June removed is wraps. Cindy and Mary were still in the pen with us. “June, walk Milo over to the other side along the edge. Walk him out. Let him unwind a bit. You two just ride over and be with him. Let them sniff noses. Stroke him from your horses. At first Milo was kind of curious about being so close to other horses. He seemed surrounded and a bit claustrophobic, but tolerated it pretty well. Then I instructed them to ride toward him, one on each side. He kept doing his best to divert, but really couldn’t, not completely. Mary would ride along the fence toward him as Cindy tried to pass by him on the inside. But he would turn and move away and do his best to not let them both come by on either side. He was a good escape artist. But he wasn’t freaking, he was using his head he was being smart about it. He was handling it. “Okay. Now you both start riding around nice and quiet. We’ll come up to you very slowly, then build to speed and squeezing him.” We started moving around in a very unassuming manner, not pushing too hard nor fast. Now at the walk toward each other. Doing great. Now speed it up a bit. Doing fine. Now trotting toward me and Milo begins getting kind of jumpy, right on the edge of losing it. “Easy man. Easy man.” Over and over I talked and rubbed with my hands and reins on his withers in support. “A little faster now. Let’s find out if he’s going to make it.” I felt Milo almost bolt. He was right on the verge when my legs, hands, body, and mind said to him, “Keep it under control. You can do it.” And he did. More and more he became a different horse right before our very eyes. I did less as he did more. His confidence exploded. His entire demeanor became one of exuding supreme confidence. Back and forth, in, under, around, and through we weaved at all gaits and directions. “Yes! He’s making it. This is unbelievable. I love it,” I exclaimed with absolute glee! The tears were welling in my eyes. They were running down June’s face as Milo made the transformation from a frightened, timid animal to a confident, almost brash elegant and magnificent horse. “My whole year is made Frank,” June shouted with unbridled happiness. “So is mine.” I said.
Frank Bell and his accredited instructors have been helping horses with their people problems for several decades. He writes interesting and educational stories about these horses and their challenges. He also helps people better understand how to communicate with these magnificent creatures by answering their vexing questions on his website. Frank has designed a logical set of exercises that immediately places both parties on higher ground . . . without the need for a round pen. Suddenly both parties are riding in confidence instead of fear. Frank Bell's 7-Step Safety System (7-SSS) has been featured in horse magazines and e-zines throughout the world including a three-part series in Western Horseman magazine. Frank's video " Discover the Horse You Never Knew" fully outlines " the system" and is available in the audio/video library that includes thirteen works.
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