Quizzes & Puzzles41 mins ago
Horse's ear grab
21 Answers
Before the first race at Ascot, a filly was reluctant to go into the stalls. Her jockey's answer was to grab her ear. Can any horsey person on here explain how and why holding her ear was supposed to make her go forwards, or more obedient to the handlers? (It didn't work, by the way, and she was withdrawn)
Answers
Yes, it's a technique for calming horses, part of a technique called T-touch, devised by an animal behaviourist called Linda Tellington. It actually works really well to calm a stressed horse, as does scratching its chest. But evidently not on this occasion.
13:56 Fri 22nd Jun 2012
It's called twitching!
It can be done in two ways from memory, by holding the ear or....my old blacksmith when faced with a horse that hated attention to the feet would put a bit of string around the soft skin at the and of the nose and twist it...
http:// en.wiki pedia.o ...i/Tw itch_%2 8device %29
Lisa x
It can be done in two ways from memory, by holding the ear or....my old blacksmith when faced with a horse that hated attention to the feet would put a bit of string around the soft skin at the and of the nose and twist it...
http://
Lisa x
lisa, I was told about it by Linda Tellington when she was consultant on a book I was working on, so I just assumed it was one of hers. But maybe she just nicked it from an older technique.
Fred, I think Ttouch has been around since the 70s or 80s, but it was regarded as a bit 'new agey' at first. But I've tried it out on horses and it does work. One in particular was a notorious biter, but he'd get all soppy and just lean against me peacefully when having his ears stroked and pulled.
Fred, I think Ttouch has been around since the 70s or 80s, but it was regarded as a bit 'new agey' at first. But I've tried it out on horses and it does work. One in particular was a notorious biter, but he'd get all soppy and just lean against me peacefully when having his ears stroked and pulled.
Well I'm going back 30 odd years and I always thought that it was a used technique.... not pleasant to watch but effective none the less.
TT is a far more gentle technique but rarely works with in seconds.... I would have thought that if they wanted the horse in the stall it would have been twitched.
Lisa x
TT is a far more gentle technique but rarely works with in seconds.... I would have thought that if they wanted the horse in the stall it would have been twitched.
Lisa x
I think they'd be reluctant to use a twitch in such a public place because there would be bound to be complaints about cruelty. As I was taught, using a twitch is a bit like using acupressure in that it is applied on a point that uses a natural method of mild sedation. I've seen it work and fail to work with different horses. Never seen the ear thing before though and some horses hate having their ears touched.
Dive is also right. It is a method of twitching. We had a horse who wouldn't load into a box. We would put a twitch on her ear and she would practically fatal asleep then we would shove her onto the box as soon as the twitch was removed she would wake up. It is more usual to put the twitch on the nose. It needs to bedone with some force.
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