My family and I bought a new horse for
our 12 year old daughter. Jack was delivered to the house, and what a sweet
temperament he had. Nothing seemed to spook him and he was very calm. At the
time we didn't have a trailer large enough to haul him, so we had not taken
the horse anywhere for about a month. We missed a few rodeos, because of the
trailer issue. We ended up buying a brand new 2 horse trailer to fit Jack
and our pony, Jazzmine, a week and a half before the next rodeo, to which we
were to attend. Very excited, my daughter and I put a halter on Jack and led
him to the new trailer just to test it out. To our surprise we could not get
the horse to get on the trailer. One step on the ramp, his eyes would get
wide and he would back up as if he was scared to death. We even managed to
get him to take two steps up getting his two front feet onto the trailer
floor, but once again, he'd get wide-eyed and back up very quickly. Here we
were with a brand new trailer, and a horse that was scared to death to get
into it, a little over a week away from the rodeo. We seemed to have tried
everything that night to get the horse onto the trailer. Luring him on with
horse treats, to which he would take a few steps and back back out with a
great look of fear on his face. Blind folding him, to which he freaked out
backing up before we even got him near the trailer. It was all we could do
to get the blind fold off of him. Putting his pony friend Jazzmine on the
trailer didn't even help. We tried smacking his rear while leading him in.
Nope, that didn't work either. If a 1000 pound horse doesn't want to load
and you don't have a few strong men on hand, good luck!

I knew giving up and letting the horse
win that night was not always considered the best thing. It's not a good
thing to let a horse win a battle. However it was only my 12 year old
daughter and I. I felt there was no way we were going to get him loaded by
ourselves. If we kept trying we might have made the problem worse. Jack
would start to associate the trailer with our frustration. We were also not
going anywhere and were just trying out the trailer for fun. We had one week
to do something about his fear of trailers.
Horses love to eat, so, the next day I
skipped his morning hay. That afternoon we walked to a nice grassy field
where the horses were not currently kept, and hand picked a wagon full of
nice green grass. We led Jack out to the trailer and put a pan of his
favorite food on the floor of the trailer. We swung the breast bar open all
of the way so the area appeared larger to him. Jack put his two front feed
on the ramp, extended his neck as far as he could, grabbed the pan with his
teeth and proceeded to pull the food out of the trailer onto the pavement!
My daughter grabbed the pan and did a tug-of-war. She won, and put the pan
back in the trailer "OH, NO, NO, NO, Jack old buddy! if you want to eat,
you have to go and get it and eat it in the trailer!" We picked up the
pan of food, let him smell it and put it back on the trailer floor, this
time keeping a hold on it so he could not pull it out.
There the food sat, and Jack was
really hungry! He got brave and stepped onto the ramp and ate his bowl of
food. "Good Boy Jack, Good Boy! We than filled his bowl with the fresh
grass. If he backed of, he didn't get any more, but once he stepped back
onto the ramp he got to eat.

That night we did it again, only
placing the pan just a tad further into the trailer. This time his front
feed were actually off of the ramp and on the trailer floor! Our hands were
stained green from picking grass for him, but we were making progress! Each
feeding he was going into the trailer a little further.
On the following morning we filled up
a hay bag full of fresh hay and topped it with a load of fresh picked grass.
We swung the hay bag on the inside of the breast bar so it was closer to the
horse. We fed him his pan of normal food first half way into the trailer.
Jack now had both front feed in the trailer and his back feed were standing
right at the hinge line of the trailer floor and the ramp. With a long
stretch of the neck Jack was able to eat.

That night we did the same routine as
all of the other feedings, only this time we put the hay bag on the other
side of the breast bar. If he wanted to eat he had to get those back legs
into the trailer. The power of food, Jack stepped all the way into the
trailer! We didn't try and put up the breast bar or close the ramp door, not
yet. We let him eat. He was in the trailer on his own free will. If he
backed out he didn't get to eat. We put him back into his field with no
food. We would than get him back out and try again. He's a smart horse and
realized, if he wanted to eat he had to go to the food.


The following day we placed his food
in the trailer and made him wait to load. Yes, he had to wait until we
allowed him to get into the trailer to eat. We only made him wait a few
minutes. While he waited he just stared at his meal. We let him load. My
daughter held his feeding pan behind the breast bar, where his head should
normally be while riding. Jack ate every bit than started on the hay holder
full of fresh grass. This time we put up the breast bar and closed the ramp
gate.


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The next day, we decided to load his pony friend
Jazzmine on the trailer before him. This would mean the divider would have
to be in the middle of the trailer. Jack's area would be smaller. No
problem, there was food in that trailer! Good food! |
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The next feeding we did the same, only
this time we drove him around the driveway circle. No problems! Jack now
associates the trailer with food, his very own feeding station. This method
was very time consuming, but I feel it was the best way to go about it. It
worked and I feel in our case, nothing else would have. We now have a horse
who is no longer afraid of getting into the trailer, so long as we have
food, but that's not as difficult to deal with than a fearful horse.
