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Archive for December, 2009

Training an Alberta Mustang

Posted by Doreen on December 28th, 2009
Wyley & Mary getting acquainted

Wyley & Mary getting acquainted

Wyley has led a life of leisure after his dramatic rescue in 2006, when as a yearling; he had been hit by a truck and then rescued and rehabilitated by Bob and Doreen Henderson.  Three years later, Wyley was sent off with Mary Renwick of Cochrane, Alberta to be saddle trained.

 

Mary has trained hundreds of horses in her day, as this has been her primary source of employment for close to thirty years.  She has worked with many different breeds from high strung thoroughbreds to Pole Ponies, Quarter Horses, Arabians and Standard Breds, just to name a few.  She once worked with an American mustang while she lived and worked in Montana, which turned into an amazing cutting horse.  The mustang never tired after many long hours of packing a rider and moving cattle on the range.    Hence Mary was excited and eager to work with another mustang, this time one from her home province of Alberta.

 

For the first five weeks Mary did a lot of ground work with Wyley, using natural horsemanship techniques.  It took several weeks just to desensitize him, in that he was very defensive about being touched and brushed all over.  Although he did not bite or anything of that nature, he just didn’t like being handled and fussed over.  Nor was he keen on letting a human take the lead and often would challenge Mary. Wyley would turn to face her, and walk in her direction, bearing his teeth and pinning his ears.  However, Mary would give it right back to him, showing him that she was the lead mare, like it or lump it.  Wyley was more bark than bite and would back down from her shortly thereafter.  Nonetheless, Mary said that he was quick to swing his back end around in her direction and she wasn’t about to take any chances as to whether or not he would kick her.  In time they developed a mutual respect for one another. 

 

Mary got Wyley familiar with being ground driven, just as one ground drives a horse to teach it to pull a wagon, she would walk behind him and get him to turn left or right or stop from the lead lines attached to his halter.  From the halter she progressed to having him wear a bridle, with a bit in his mouth. 

 

 

Driving Mr. Wyley

Driving Mr. Wyley

 

 

Once Mary was confident in Wyley’s improved manners and the movements learned while on the ground, she moved up to putting a saddle on his back and then would lunge him on a line to get him used to the stirrups flapping at his sides and to feel the weight of that foreign object tied onto to his back. 

 

Building slowly onto his training, Mary was finally at a point where she was confident enough to lay across his back with one foot in the stirrup.  When he didn’t have an issue with that she progressed to sitting on him and finally got him to move around freely while she sat on him.  Wyley didn’t offer to buck at all; the challenge was more in getting him to budge.  He thought if he stood still long enough Mary would get tired of the game and get off his back, literally.  However, Mary implemented the ground driving cues to get him to move ahead followed by turning left and right.  Once these basic movements were established then they picked up the pace by getting him to trot with a rider on his back.   The main thing Mary finds with Wyley is to give him a chance to think about what she is asking of him so that he can respond favorably.  Not rushing or worrying him, prevents any type of explosive response a person would get from any young horse in training that was confused and anxious about any part of the procedure.  During his training thus far when he did have a problem with any part of it, Mary would stop when he was getting upset, let it go and try again at a later date.  Mary’s main priority is safety for herself and the horse she is working with, and therefore she tries to read a situation or the horses body language before it becomes a problem.  Wyley apparently is very good at telling her what he does and doesn’t like with his ears being the radar to go by, according to Mary.

 The Eyes Say it All

The Eyes Say it All

 

 

 

 

WHOAS Visits Ecole Senator Riley School

Posted by Doreen on December 16th, 2009

The Grade Six class at Ecole Senator Riley School invited Bob to talk to them about the wild horses of Alberta , as they are doing a wild horse project, so Bob and I headed out to High River on that cold Monday afternoon of December 14th to give a presentation.   Bob showed them our twenty minute photoshow of the wild horses, which is self narrated, then followed by a question period.  The children were quite interested in the wild horse situation and loved the pictures and stories.    The children suggested a poster contest and Bob offered them a calendar to the first place winner of the contest.  Some of the posters will be shown on this site when the contest is complete.  It was enjoyable to hear the kids remarks afterwards as they had some really good feed back.  One boy said that the wolves only take out caribou that are old or sick and not the healthy ones because the healthy ones would injure them if they tried.  He said the same thing would then go with the horses.    Hence mother nature insures only the survival of the fittest.  This is something we have witnessed all these years of riding in the wilderness, the cougar, bear and wolves take out a lot of horses in a year.  For example in a larger herd where five foals are born in the spring, by the fall only two might remain, and one by the following spring.  Between the predators and the harsh winters, only the strongest do survive.  That doesn’t even account for the four month capture season currently underway. 

Kim Hodder their teacher sent us this email yesterday;

Bob,
 
Thank you very much for coming to talk with my class.  We all really learned a lot and admire you for your hard efforts on behalf of the Wild Horses.  We are hoping to make a difference and make people aware.
 
We will proceed with our posters and the kids have suggested that we write something in our newletter too.  We are also going to talk with the grade 7’s and 8’s during one of our assemblies.  They are coming up with new ideas all the time and we will do everything that we can.
 
Thank you again.
 
Kim Hodder
Articles and pictures of wild horses of Alberta

Articles and pictures of wild horses of Alberta

Ms. Kim Hodder & Bob Henderson with Gr. 6 Class

Ms. Kim Hodder & Bob Henderson with Gr. 6 Class

Pictures made by Class

Pictures made by Class

Six-Year-Old Donates Birthday Money to WHOAS

Posted by Doreen on December 2nd, 2009

We received a very touching letter from the parents of Lucy, which reads as follows;

To the Wild Horses of Alberta Society,

We are sending you this cheque because my daughter, Lucy (6 years old), decided that she would like to raise money for her birthday to save the wild horses.

We hope this enclosed cheque of $160.00 will help out a bit.

Sincerely, Dave, Jenni, Lucy and Sophie Griffiths.

November 15, 2009 I wrote back to them and it reads;

Dear Lucy and Family;

Thank you so much Lucy, for thinking of the wild horses of Alberta and donating $160 from money raised on your birthday. That was very kind of you and I am sure that if the horses knew how much you loved them,  they would be very happy. We really appreciate the kindness you have shown and the money will go towards saving horses in trouble and educating the public of their existence.

A few horses that we saved in the past included a couple of young colts that were in a whole lot of danger. One was a year old boy horse who was hit by a truck. Wyley was his name and he was wandering hazardously near the busy highway waiting for his horse family to return. He was all alone in the wilderness, where it is really unsafe to be by yourself.  He was also very skinny from lack of food and had some really bad owies on him. His family thought he had gone to heaven so they sadly carried on without him. My husband Bob heard about the little fellow and drove his truck, pulling a horse trailer that had my mare named Gypsy inside it. Gypsy is a mommy horse and Wyley was so happy to see another horse after being alone and scared for weeks, that he got into the trailer with Gypsy and then came home with us.

We had to give Wyley some medicine as he was very sick.  After he got better he was able to run and play with two other boy horses his age and was happy to have a new home and herd. Wyley is now four years old and going to a school for horses.

Another horse we rescued was a new baby boy horse, just a few weeks old, that was stranded on a gravel island on the river and all alone. We rescued him with the help of a kind man by the name of Doug, who rode on horseback across the dangerous river to go get the little colt.  He managed to get a halter on the foal and helped get him onto a bigger island.  Three other men including Bob, Bill and a Police Officer named Constable Chad Pushie’ then helped pull the colt to the other side to safety. Doug adopted the colt and named him River and bottle fed him milk until he was old enough to eat grass and drink water.

The calendar enclosed is our gift back to you that shows you all the wonderful horses that you are helping.

Sincerely,

Bob and Doreen Henderson

Wyley was rescued in 2006
Wyley was rescued in 2006
Healthy and Happy Wyley
Wyley Healthy Again and One Year Older
Colt named River, Rescued in 2007
 
Colt named River, Rescued in 2007
River in training

River in training

Neither horse could be returned to the wild as they were too used to humans by the time they were healthy enough to be released.  River especially, being so young, only knew Doug as “Mom”.