Dr Gustafson is a practicing veterinarian, equine behavior educator, and novelist. The application of behavior science enhances optimum health, performance, soundness, contentment, and longevity in animal athletes. Behavioral and nutritional strategies enrich the lives of stabled horses. Training and husbandry from the horse's perspective result in content, cooperative horses who are willing to learn and perform.
One of my goals, is to develop the racehorse mind.
What equine behavior principles do you follow to develop the appropriate competitive mindset to persevere and prevail? Or perhaps, what do you avoid beyond the obvious (harsh weaning, for example). Time and again, I see unnecessarily induced stress, fear, and pain, as men attempt to isolate and confine their weanlings and yearlings. The poorly planned unorchestrated movement restrictions result in injury. Chain-shank handling, punishment and force applied during these critical stages of development ruins many thoroughbreds, rendering them unfit to race.
At Keeneland, the inappropriate horsemanship was devastating. A growing horse’s potential to run and win can be harmed with coercive, chain-shanked sale preparation. Halter or saddling training must be a good deal for the horse to maintain their racing spirit. When pain is inflicted to achieve handling compliance, the side-effect is ruining a horse's competitive spirit, especially fillies.
Imprint training newborn foals falls into this category of coercive training. It is believed interfering with the mare/foal bond in the first hours and days, or even weeks, can harm the foal’s future confidence to race. The mare/foal bonding is critical, best achieved uninterrupted. If one feels the need to interfere, handle the mare, hands off the foal early on. The mare is the preferred teacher, the one who knows with near certainty if she has been properly nurtured through life, herself. It is she and other broodmares in the herd that instill the winning mind into the foal. Humans have no idea. The mare and herd enhance the foal’s flight survival mechanism to win derbies. Abusive attempts to subdue flight when haltering and handling has the potential to subdue all subsequent flight. Chain shanking is counterproductive. Imprint training is counterproductive. To be effective, training must be a good deal for the horse.
Too often, at all stages, I observe trainers and handlers damaging the horse’s inherent desire and confidence to win. To preserve the inherent flight responsiveness needed to win races, training of the foal should be delayed until the foal approaches the humans, save the early haltering and perinatal preventive medical measures, best done slick and quick. Avoid products that damage or interfere with the mare and foal’s sense of smell.
This imprint phase is critical. Coercive handling can cause great psychological and physical harm. No interference unless nursing assistance or health monitoring is indicated helps ensure the future is one of heart and try.
Development of future willing partnerships between race horse and rider, requires that the foal be taught to be horse as taught by the mare. Winning the Kentucky Derby has to be the horse’s idea.
The dam nurtures and sprouts that genetic seed during the imprint phase, or not. Humans can only interfere with the essential process.
The minutes, hours, and days following birth are a critical learning period due to the precocious nature of the horse. Birthed to run within hours to survive. The mare is the long-evolved teacher here, and the immediate ability to flee is the foal’s long-evolved survival mechanism. No one teaches a foal the notion of flight better than her dam. Humans can only get in the way.
Interference is to be avoided if it is races you want your foal to someday win. There are safer methods to teach the foal to be an easy-handler later in life. Taking away all urge to flight via imprint training may be appropriate if the goal is a service pony desensitized for life so as to be un-reactive to the environment altogether.
Care must be taken to not inadvertently take flight away from competition horses by interfering during the imprint phase. Observe from a distance. Handle the mare, and let the foal learn by observing your relationship with the mare, and make sure that relationship is a good one beforehand, please. No shanking the mare, either, please. European horsefolk demonstrate appropriate training and handling. Very few chain shanks are used or needed. Their yearlings are
We have secured talent from the genes with our breeding, soundness with your appropriate nutrition. To facilitate and ensure sway we put the mare in charge and stay out of the way.
How do you help ensure that your weanlings develop the confidence to paddock and load, and to then run by and through horses in tight company to win tough races, please? In Europe, they emphasize enrichment training in earnest, and at their sales the yearlings are handled with dignity.